Pediatric Wrist Fractures
Pediatric Wrist Fractures Treatment in Raleigh, NC
Your child fell and has wrist pain and swelling? Wrist fractures are the most common fracture in children — and most heal beautifully in a cast within 3–4 weeks thanks to children's remarkable remodeling capacity.
What Is Pediatric Wrist Fractures?
Wrist fractures in children almost always involve the distal radius — the growth plate end of the radius at the wrist. The three main patterns are: buckle (torus) fractures — the most common and most stable; greenstick fractures — incomplete breaks with angulation; and complete fractures, sometimes with growth plate (Salter-Harris) involvement.
Children's extraordinary remodeling capacity means that most wrist fractures — even with significant angulation — heal perfectly in a cast. Growth plate fractures at the distal radius are classified by Salter-Harris type. Types I and II — the most common — have excellent outcomes. Types III–V require closer monitoring.
ⓘ Children are not small adults. Angulation that would require surgery in an adult is often acceptable in a growing child with remodeling potential. Specialist evaluation determines when casting is sufficient vs. when reduction or surgery is needed.
Risk Factors
Pediatric wrist fractures are almost exclusively from falls.
Playground Falls
Monkey bars and climbing equipment
Trampoline Falls
Very common mechanism — falls onto outstretched hand
Cycling & Scooters
Falls from bikes and scooters
Snowboarding
Wrist guards significantly reduce risk
Sports
Soccer, football, basketball falls
Girls Age 10–12
Peak risk during growth spurt
How Pediatric Wrist Fractures Progresses
Most common type. Bone buckles rather than breaks cleanly. Very stable.
Incomplete or displaced fracture. Cast usually sufficient; reduction if angulation unacceptable.
Complete fracture or joint-involving growth plate fracture.
Diagnosis
Pediatric wrist fractures are diagnosed with X-rays. Buckle fractures may be subtle — cortical buckling on the compression side only. Growth plate fractures show physeal widening or step-off. Bilateral comparison X-rays help when growth plate injury is uncertain.
- ✓X-rays (PA, lateral, oblique)
- ✓Salter-Harris classification if growth plate involved
- ✓Physeal width comparison (bilateral if uncertain)
- ✓Neurovascular assessment
- ✓Rotational alignment assessment
Treatment Options
Dr. Chambers recommends the best approach based on your individual presentation and goals.
Splint or Cast
Buckle fractures: removable splint 3–4 weeks. Greenstick and displaced fractures: closed reduction under sedation and cast. Children's remodeling capacity means surgery is rarely needed.
Closed Reduction & K-wire Pinning
Unstable or irreducible fractures, Salter-Harris III and IV fractures, and fractures with unacceptable angulation are stabilized with K-wire pins. Removed in clinic at 3–4 weeks. Excellent outcomes with proper alignment.
Recovery Timeline
Immobilization
Cast or splint. Finger motion encouraged. Elevation for swelling.
Cast Removal
Cast off. Wrist range-of-motion begins. Children regain motion very quickly.
Return to Activity
Full return to most activities. Return to sport with wrist guard protection.
Growth Plate Monitoring
If growth plate involved: serial X-rays at 3–4 month intervals to confirm normal growth.
Frequently Asked Questions
The great majority do not — children's bones remodel remarkably well. Buckle fractures (the most common type) are treated with a removable splint only. Surgery is used for unstable fractures, significant displacement, growth plate injuries involving the joint surface, and fractures that cannot be held in acceptable alignment in a cast after reduction.
Yes — within 3–5 days. ER physicians stabilize fractures but are not fellowship-trained in pediatric hand and wrist surgery. Dr. Chambers reviews alignment on your child's X-rays, determines whether the position is acceptable given their age and remodeling potential, and identifies any growth plate injuries needing monitoring.
A buckle or torus fracture is the most common pediatric wrist fracture — the bone buckles on the compression side without breaking completely, like a soda can dented rather than crushed. These are the most stable fractures in children, heal reliably in 3–4 weeks in a removable splint, and virtually always have excellent outcomes without surgery.
Related Conditions & Resources
Child's Wrist Fracture? Get Expert Evaluation.
Most pediatric wrist fractures heal without surgery. Same-week appointments. No referral needed.

Stephen Chambers, M.D.
Dual Board-Certified Hand & Upper Extremity Surgeon · Raleigh Orthopaedic
