Japanese Journal of Radiological Technology
Online ISSN : 1881-4883
Print ISSN : 0369-4305
ISSN-L : 0369-4305
Clinical Technologies
A Review of the Position Adopted by Patients When Acquiring Images of the Base of the Hamate Hook
Shunsuke TakamatsuSeiichirou MiyakawaHisaya SatoWataru SuzukiTakeshi NishizawaMasami NakamuraHirotaka UmedaShogo SaiKyoichi KatoYasuo NakazawaJun Ikeda
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Keywords: hamate hook
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2014 Volume 70 Issue 6 Pages 549-555

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Abstract
The hamate bone, one of the carpal (wrist) bones, has a large uncinate process protruding from the palm side. In sports such as golf and tennis, the hamate bone can break if is subjected to a high external force, such as from the handle of a racquet or club. At our hospital we take X-ray images of the hamate bone from two directions: an axial image through the carpal tunnel and an image at the base of the hamate hook (conventional method). While the conventional method makes it easy to create images of the base of the hamate hook, the patient may suffer pain during image-taking because the hamate bone is pulled to cause radial flexion. We therefore investigated a method of imaging that would create three-dimensional computed tomography (3DCT) images of the base of the hamate hook in which the patient would only have to only rotate the wrist externally and elevate the fore-arm without any radial flexion. Our results suggest that it is possible to obtain images of the base of the hamate hook as clear as those acquired using the conventional method with the patient in a comfortable and painless position taking images at an external rotation angle of 50.3° and a forearm elevation angle of 20.3°.
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© 2014 Japanese Society of Radiological Technology
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