Hand & Wrist · Acute injury

Metacarpal (Boxer's) fracture

Fracture of a metacarpal bone in the hand

Cared for across all 6 OSI locations

Overview

what it is and why it matters

Metacarpal fractures are among the most common hand fractures seen in the emergency department. The "boxer's fracture" specifically refers to a neck fracture of the ring or small finger metacarpal from a direct axial load — punching a wall or another person. The head angulates volarly, producing a depressed knuckle.

Other metacarpal fractures (shaft, base, index/middle neck) require more scrutiny for rotation, shortening, and intra-articular extension.

Diagnosis

exam first, imaging second

PA, lateral, and oblique hand X-rays define fracture pattern, apex angulation, shortening, and rotation. Rotational malignment is best assessed clinically: flexing all fingers toward the scaphoid — any finger that crosses or gaps is rotated. Up to 40° of apex-dorsal angulation is acceptable at the ring/small metacarpal neck; less angulation is acceptable at the index and middle metacarpals.

Treatment Path

how care progresses at OSI
1

Buddy taping and functional splint

For minimally displaced, non-rotated small/ring finger neck fractures.

2

Ulnar gutter splint

Immobilizes ring and small finger neck fractures in the position of intrinsic-plus (70–90° MCP flexion) through the early healing phase.

3

Closed reduction

When angulation exceeds acceptable limits, the fracture is reduced under a digital block using the Jahss maneuver.

Surgical Options at OSI

if non-operative care isn't enough

Surgery is indicated for rotation, shortening >4–5 mm, intra-articular CMC fracture-dislocations, and fractures that cannot be held in reduction.

Providers Who Treat Metacarpal (boxer's) Fracture

sports-medicine team

Further Reading

authoritative sources

External patient-education references and related OSI pages for additional background:

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