A dislocation in the wrist joint can be easily reduced, but is difficult to maintain; if you pull it a little and put one organ against the other, the joint will return to its place, but it can be difficult to fix the head in the hole, because the tissues surrounding this joint swell and more than one person pulls the flint back, and the chiropractor pulls the hand in the opposite direction and even forward and extends one finger after another, starting from the thumb and reaching the little finger, and thus the dislocation is aligned and set. After this, apply a medicinal bandage and bandage it.
A sign of this is that when the fingers are dislocated, they deviate inward and a protrusion appears inward and a depression outward. The same thing happens with the bones of the wrist.
Repositioning fingers after dislocation presents some difficulty. They should not be pulled in a straight direction, but should be grabbed and lifted with the index finger of the hand under which the base of the fingers is when you grab them, as if you want to tear them out of their container. Then you will see that the fingers are in place and you will hear a sound.