X Ray Both Hand AP View

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X Ray Both Hand AP View
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X Ray Both Hand AP View, in Visit Clinic

An X-ray of both hands taken front-to-back to look for fractures, arthritis, alignment, and bone problems in Visit Clinic.

centreCentre Visit
SAMPLE TYPE
Tissue
FASTING REQUIRED
No
GENDER
Male/Female
GET REPORTS IN
24 hours
TEST INCLUDED
1
Customers
20K+Customers
Labs
CertifiedLabs
Rating
4.5+Rating
Accuracy
ProvenAccuracy

What is a X Ray Both Hand AP View Test in Visit Clinic?

An X Ray Both Hand AP View produces X-ray images of both hands from front to back. It shows the bones, joints, and surrounding bone alignment in each hand. This view helps doctors see fractures, dislocations, arthritis changes, growth plate issues, infections, and some tumors. It is important for diagnosing injury and joint disease. Doctors use these images to decide treatment, track healing after a fracture, plan surgery, or monitor chronic conditions like arthritis. The test is quick and widely available. It gives a clear look at bone structure but does not show soft tissues as well as other scans.

X Ray Both Hand AP View Test Preparation in Visit Clinic

No special preparation is required.

X Ray Both Hand AP View Test Parameters in Visit Clinic

The X Ray Both Hand AP View test evaluates various parameters. Here are the main parameters checked:

  • Single test

Why Take a X Ray Both Hand AP View Test in Visit Clinic?

X Ray Both Hand AP View is commonly ordered as part of a musculoskeletal or trauma imaging series. Doctors request it when patients have hand pain, recent injury, swelling, reduced motion, or visible deformity. It helps diagnose fractures, dislocations, arthritis, growth plate injury, infections, and bone lesions. Abnormal results can be caused by trauma, chronic joint disease, infection, tumors, or metabolic bone conditions. Family history of congenital bone problems or early arthritis may make this test more important.

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Frequently asked questions

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What is the AP hand position in Visit Clinic?plus

The AP (anteroposterior) hand position is an X‑ray view where the beam passes from the anterior (palmar) to posterior (dorsal) surface. The patient supinates the hand with fingers extended and slightly separated, palm facing the X‑ray tube; the central ray is directed perpendicular at the third metacarpophalangeal joint. It’s used for trauma or when a PA view isn’t possible.

What does AP view mean in X-ray in Visit Clinic?plus

AP view stands for anteroposterior projection: the X‑ray beam passes from the front (anterior) of the body to the back (posterior). It’s commonly used for bedridden or portable chest X‑rays. AP positioning can enlarge apparent heart and mediastinal size and alters lung markings compared with PA views, so clinicians account for projection when assessing cardiac size, tubes, lines, or lung pathology.

What are the X-ray views of the hand in Visit Clinic?plus

Standard hand X-ray views: PA (posteroanterior) for overall alignment and joint spaces; oblique (45°) to visualize metacarpals and joints; lateral to assess displacement and dorsal/volar angulation. Special views include scaphoid (PA with ulnar deviation or dedicated scaphoid), AP for infants, and Norgaard (ball‑catcher) for rheumatoid evaluation. PA, oblique and lateral are most commonly requested.

What is the difference between AP and PA view of the hand X-ray in Visit Clinic?plus

The PA (posteroanterior) hand view is taken with the palm flat on the detector so x‑rays enter from the dorsum; it’s the standard because it minimizes object-to-image distance, reduces magnification and shows true joint spaces and carpal relationships. The AP (anteroposterior) view has the palm facing the tube, produces more magnification and slight distortion, and is used when PA positioning isn’t possible.

How to position AP in Visit Clinic?plus

For an AP chest radiograph, position the patient upright or supine facing the detector with the thorax centered, shoulders rolled forward and chin elevated. Center the x‑ray beam at mid‑thorax (approximately T7) perpendicular to the detector, instruct deep inspiration and hold, and remove clothing or artifacts from the field. Use appropriate exposure settings and shielding to minimize radiation and repeats.

What is the normal position of the hand in Visit Clinic?plus

The normal (functional/resting) position of the hand has the wrist slightly extended (about 20–30°) with slight ulnar deviation, metacarpophalangeal joints flexed roughly 35–45°, proximal interphalangeal joints flexed about 15–30°, and distal interphalangeal joints slightly flexed. The thumb is opposed and mildly abducted across the palm, enabling an efficient grip and balance between intrinsic and extrinsic muscles.