The kinematics of the wrist during radial-ulnar deviation and
flexion-extension were studied in several ways. In six fresh cadaver
wrists, the forearm was fixed in full pronation, each motion was
constrained to one plane, and two metal markers were placed in each of the
finger metacarpals, as well as in the radius and all of the carpal bones
except the pisiform and greater multangular. Radial ulnar and
flexion-extension movements in these wrists were studied
roentgenographically. In the wrists of six normal volunteers, a similar
roentgenographic analysis was carried out and the trajectories of wrist
motions also were studied using light-emitting diodes. Finally,
roentgenographic measurements were made on 100 wrists of normal subjects.
From these studies, it was concluded that: (1) during each of these
motions, rotation occurs about a fixed axis located within the head of the
capitate, and the location of each axis is not changed by the position of
the hand in either plane; (2) the distance from the base of the third
metacarpal to the distal articular surface of the radius (the carpal
height), measured along the proximally projected axis of the third
metacarpal on posteroanterior roentgenograms, is constant throughout
radial-ulnar deviation of the normal wrist and can be used as a measure of
carpal collapse; and (3) the perpendicular distance of the fixed axis of
rotation for radial-ulnar deviation from the distally projected
longitudinal axis of the ulna can be used as a quantitative measurement of
the amount of translation of the carpus in pathological conditions.