“…by using a potato or a spoon to bruise over a bone) are readily available online and in soldiers' chat rooms. The areas that are most likely to be injured are bones that are covered with a thin subcutaneous layer, such as the radial styloid, the lateral and medial malleolus and the medial femoral condyle (Thein et al, 2012). In the case of spurious scaphoid fractures, pain and swelling might be localized to the snuffbox, but since the patient is unlikely to know which bone is supposed to be broken, there might be other exaggerated signs, such as rigidity of the wrist and a level of subjective pain out of proportion upon range of motion testing.…”