A distal right radius fracture usually allows you to exercise your wrist in about a month and a half. If a distal fracture of the right radius occurs, it is usually immobilized in a cast, in a small splint, or in a plate. If the fracture is healing well, you will be able to exercise your wrist in about a month and a half. If the fracture is externally immobilized with a plaster or small splint, it can only temporarily exercise the flexion and extension of the fingers, and the intensity of the exercise should not be too strong at the initial stage, and the wrist joint should not be weight-bearing exercise, so as to avoid affecting the healing of the fracture. If the right distal radius fracture is fixed with a steel plate, the wrist and fingers should be exercised under the guidance of a professional doctor after the operation, and the exercise should be gradual, avoiding early exercise or over-exercise, so as not to aggravate the injury. Before the wrist function exercise, it is recommended to cooperate with the doctor to complete the radiography examination to clarify the degree of fracture healing, and let the professional doctor judge the recovery of the fracture.