Authors
Joseph Salem-Hernández, Hiram E Luigi-Martinez, Derick Rodriguez-Reyes, Norman Ramírez, Jose Bossolo
Published in
Cureus. Volume 18. Issue 6. Pages e110614. Epub Jun 10, 2026.
Abstract
The intersection of art and orthopaedic surgery represents a profound synthesis of technical precision, aesthetic sensibility, and humanistic care. This narrative review examines the artistic dimensions of orthopaedic surgery, with particular emphasis on hand and upper extremity procedures in which form and function are inextricably linked. We trace the historical evolution of surgical artistry from Renaissance anatomists and craftsmen, including Ambroise Pare, whose articulated prosthetic hands united the ingenuity of locksmiths with the vision of surgeons, through nineteenth-century operative theatre culture, in which surgical skill was evaluated for its elegance and grace as much as its outcomes, to modern microsurgery and the age of robotics. Drawing on a systematic review of peer-reviewed sources spanning anatomy, reconstructive surgery, outcomes research, and the philosophy of craft, we analyse the application of core artistic principles, proportion, symmetry, harmony, rhythm, and balance, to surgical practice, demonstrating that these concepts provide a functional framework for operative decision-making, technique selection, and outcome evaluation. The surgeon's role extends beyond technical competence to encompass aesthetic judgment, creative problem-solving, spatial visualisation, and an appreciation for the beauty inherent in anatomical restoration. Specific techniques in hand and upper extremity surgery are examined as case studies of artistic principle applied to clinical practice: toe-to-hand microsurgical transfer, soft-tissue flap coverage, fingertip and nail reconstruction, scar management, rheumatoid hand reconstruction, and congenital deformity correction each illustrate how aesthetic refinement and functional restoration are not competing objectives but mutually reinforcing goals. Patient-reported outcomes related to aesthetic satisfaction are evaluated through validated measures including the Patient and Observer Scar Assessment Scale (POSAS), with evidence confirming that hand appearance constitutes a significant determinant of patient satisfaction, psychological well-being, and quality of life (QoL). The education of the surgeon's hand, through apprenticeship, deliberate practice, and embodied tactile experience with instruments, is identified as an irreplaceable component of surgical formation that no technological advance can render obsolete. We conclude that excellence in orthopaedic surgery demands mastery of three interrelated domains: scientific knowledge, technical skill, and artistic sensibility. Future directions include the formal integration of aesthetic training into surgical curricula, development of objective aesthetic outcome metrics, expanded use of three-dimensional imaging for aesthetic planning, and institutional recognition of the artistic dimensions of surgical practice as essential components of comprehensive, patient-centred care.
PMID:
42434621
Bibliographic data and abstract were imported from PubMed on 11 Jul 2026.
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