RATIONALE:: In competitive athletes, the upper extremity is subject to tremendous torsional forces with axial loading due to repetitive weight bearing. Approximately 25% of injuries in sports are related to the hand or wrist. Skeletal deformity on the wrist physis is common in athletes due to repetitive loading and presents at early ages between 6 and 13 years. Additionally, it is more common in female than in male athletes. PATIENT CONCERNS:: An 11-year-old girl who was a climber complained of pain on her left wrist without direct trauma. She had participated in climbing exercise for several years and had no medical history. Thorough radiological evaluation, we diagnosed physeal injury of the left radius. After healing of the physeal injury of the radius, she complained of pain on fourth finger of right hand and radiographs revealed physeal injury of the right fourth finger. DIAGNOSIS:: Radiographs revealed physeal injury of the left radius. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed epiphyseal widening of the radial aspect of the wrist and bone marrow signal increase on T2-weighted imaging. Likewise, radiographs showed physeal injury of the right fourth finger INTERVENTIONS:: No surgery was performed and we applied wrist brace and finger splint for conservative treatment. OUTCOMES:: The patientʼs pain was immediately relieved. The patient had no complications or recurrence of symptoms and was undergoing regular check-ups every 6 months. LESSONS:: During climbing exercise, repeated high pressure causes damage of the hand and wrist joints in young patients. Chronic pain in this group must be carefully evaluated, and radiographs should be obtained for diagnosis and early treatment. Conservative treatment of these injuries has good results, and avoiding intensive power training avoids the risk of this injury.