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Surgery & recovery
Distal radius fracture ORIF
Realigns a broken wrist (distal radius) and holds it with a metal plate and screws. Common after a fall onto an outstretched hand when the bone is too displaced for a cast alone.
Why it's done
- Displaced or unstable distal radius fractures
- Fractures into the wrist joint surface
Typical recovery phases
Timelines are general patterns. Your surgeon's protocol always wins.
- 1Weeks 0–2
Wound healing, finger motion, swelling control.
Elevate the hand; move every finger often; wear the splint as directed.
- 2Weeks 2–6
Begin wrist motion as cleared.
Gentle wrist range of motion; no lifting or pushing.
- 3Weeks 6–12
Add light strengthening.
Putty, light grip work; progress with therapist guidance.
- 4Months 3–6
Return to demanding tasks.
Heavier lifting and impact return last.
Red flags — call your team
- Increasing pain, swelling, or color change
- New numbness or weakness
- Drainage, fever, or hardware-site pain
Splints you may wear
Sources
- Distal Radius Fractures (Broken Wrist) — AAOS OrthoInfo(accessed 2026-04-22)