Part 26
The joint of the hand is dislocated either inward or outward, most
frequently inward. The symptoms are easily recognized: if inward,
the patient cannot at all bend his fingers; and if outward, he cannot
extend them. With regard to the reduction,-by placing the fingers
above a table, extension and counter-extension are to be made by other
persons, while with the palm or heel of the hand on the projecting
bone one pushes forward, and another from behind on the other bone;
some soft substance is to be applied to it, and the arm is to be turned
to the prone position if the dislocation was forward, but to the supine,
if backward. The treatment is to be conducted with bandages.