Historical Overview
Ancient bonesetters have known for centuries that broken bones are painful to touch. Pain in response to touch or palpation of the fracture is accurately called fracture tenderness. The bonesetters also recognized that palpating the bone for the area of maximal tenderness would allow them to determine the fracture site quite accurately. Further they knew the limb containing the fracture (broken bone) was manipulated false motion in the limb on related to a joint could be detected because of motion at the fracture site. In addition motion at the fracture site also called crepitus, the Latin word for rattling or creaking at the site of injury could be detected when fractures were manipulated3.
Description
- Palpation of a fracture that causes pain is accurately called fracture tenderness and is a very sensitive sign of a broken (fractured) bone.
- Crepitus is a gritting or crunching sensation at the fracture caused by manipulating an unstable fracture where each part of the bone is moving separately because of the fracture.
- Fracture deformity may occur due to an unstable and/or displaced break in the bone causing the bone to loss its normal anatomical alignment and shape. When a fracture heals in a abnormal displaced or angulated shape, a malunion of the bone occurs and can deform the limb. Fractures of the growth plate can disrupt growth and produce limb deformity as a child grows.
- False motion may occur at an unstable fracture rather than at a joint when a fractured bone is manipulated.
Pathophysiology
- Crepitus and fracture deformity may arise from Colles’ fracture, distal radius growth plate fracture or scaphoid fracture.
- Distal radius fractures are usually the result of a fall on an outstretched hand (FOOSH).
- Scaphoid fractures represent 50–80% of all carpal bone fractures in young people.1
Instructions
- Palpate to elicit crepitus; take care so that there is no further damage to bony fragments and the surrounding soft tissue
- Evaluate for mechanical blocks to flexion and extension
- Check for tenderness and ask the patient about the severity and duration of pain
- Do not try to assess fractures for false motion without anesthesia.
Variations
- Evaluate the nerve of the injured extremity before and after manipulative reduction.2
Related Signs and Tests
- Tinel’s sign
- Radial pulse
- Sensory exam by nerve
Diagnostic Performance Characteristics
- The fracture crepitus should be gently assessed with fracture tendermess to improve reliable location of potential fractures which can then be verified with routine X-rays.