musculoskeletal Flashcards

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1
Q

what is an articular fracture

A

a fracture that involves a joint

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2
Q

salter harris physeal fractures

A

1 - just physis (most common)
2 - physeal with small amount of metaphyseal inclusion
3 - physeal fracture with small amount of epiphysis
4 - fracture through physis, metaphysis and epiphysis
5 - non-displaced compression of physis on one side

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3
Q

aim of fractures involving growth plates

A

aim to maintain normal growth of the long bones resulting in normal limb length with no deformities
animals will adapt to a slightly shorter leg

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4
Q

physeal fracture of tibial plateau

A

if untreated plateau remains at greater angle and puts extra strain on cranial cruciate ligament

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5
Q

fracture of capital physis

A

young male cat
repair with k wire of femoral head and neck ostectomy/hip replacement may be required

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6
Q

distal femoral physeal fractures

A

common
diaphysis can lie within the quadriceps

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7
Q

open wound classification

A

type 1 - small wound <1cm with little contamination, treat as closed
type 2 - extensive wound >1cm communicating with fracture
type 3 - very extensive soft tissue damage and fractured bones protruding through skin

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8
Q

primary bone healing

A

fracture heals without calus
fracture initially widens as bone resorbs then bone to bone healing occurs

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9
Q

secondary bone healing

A

formation of fibrous callus first
callus remodels into bone

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10
Q

what is perthe’s disease

A

avascular necrosis of the femoral head - toy/small under 6 months
lameness/muscle atrophy(gluteals), pain/crepitus on hip extension
mottled femoral head on radiograph
nsaids/ physio conservative rare, surgery - femoral head and neck excision, can do hip replacement

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11
Q

metaphyseal osetopathy

A

dogs < 6 months, severe pain to metaphysis of all limbs. unable to walk, pyrexic and pitting oedema over metaphyseal
imaging - looks like an extra growth plate with lucency parallel to growth plate, physis can bridge and cause angular limb deformity
hospitalise - analgesia, steroids, prognosis guarded

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12
Q

craniomandibular osteopathy

A

<6m small breed
palisading new bone on mandible, occipital creast and tympanic bullae
analgesia, coticosteroids, fluids/enteral support

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13
Q

Panosteitis

A

common <1y, gsd/male. shifting lameness
depresses/pyrexia, pain on diaphysis palpation
loss of trabecular pattern, endosteal and periosteal new bone
rest and analgesia - self limiting
excellent prognosis

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14
Q

rickets

A

absolute lack of vitamin D - rare, pain/swelling around physeal regions, reluctance to move, wide growth plates with delayed mineralisation
can be caused by secondary hyperparathyroidism from low CA high phosphorus diet(meat)
can have folding fractures/vertebral body collapse
correct diet, analgesia, restrict exercise

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15
Q

pituitary dwarfism

A

rare congenital condition gsd
physis stays open, puppy coat and no pubertal changes
treat with cortisol, thyroxine, progestogens (SE - pyometra, insulin resistance, mammary hyperplasia)
reduced life expectancy

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16
Q

angular limb defeormities

A

short ulna most common - distal more prone to trauma and premature growth plate closure
valgus deformity with cranial bowing
short radius - premature closure of distal radius - subluxation of radiohumeral joint

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17
Q

osteochondrosis

A

very common - failure ossification of articular cartilage, fragmentation of cartilage allows synovial contact with subchondral bone - inflammation
elbow - very common (guarded)
shoulder - rare (good)
stifle - rare (poor)
hock - uncommon (poor)

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18
Q

elbow dysplasia (all elbow ocd)

A

polygenic inherited disease affected by growth rate diet and exercise
chronic lameness, limb abduction, pain on medial compartment loading, effusion
orthogonal views + flexed lateral can be helpful
common lesions
fragmented medial condyle
osetochondrosis dissecans
ununited anconeal process
incomplete ossification of medial humeral epicondyle
CT and arthroscopy helpful

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19
Q

fragmented coronoid process treatment

A

conservative - weight control, nsaids, prp, stem cells…..
surgical - options - removal of fragment, off loading medial compartment , partial/total elbow replacement, arthrodesis
guarded prognosis

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20
Q

osteochrondrosis dissecans treatment

A

surgically managed - medial arthrotomy/arthroscopy, remove fragment, curette deficit
can replace deficit with autograft
prognosis fair

21
Q

ununited anconeal process treatment

A

remove fragment, reattach with screw, ulnar osteotomy
in mature animal can treat medically

22
Q

shoulder osteochondrosis

A

lab/border collie, 6-8 months
lame rising, worse after exercise, pain on shoulder extension, scapular muscle atrophy
flattening of causal third of glenoid, joint mouse/minearalised cartilage flap sometimes visable
surgical management - remove fragment, debride deficit
analgesia

23
Q

stifle osteochondrosis

A

6-12m lab/staffies
chronic lameness, joint pain, joint effusion,
flattened condyle on mediolateral view, deficit either medial or lateral femoral condyles
remove fragment and curette deficit can replace deficit with autograft
prognosis fair/guarded

24
Q

hock osteochondrosis

A

6-12m, lab/rottie, lameness after exercise.
ocd on medial trochlea of talus, widened joint space, sclerosis of subchondral bone, secondary arthritic change
remove osteochondral fragment or salvage (pantarsal arthrodesis) - often required

25
Q

is cruciate disease common

A

any dog with hind limb lameness has cruciate disease until proven otherwise

26
Q

is patella subluxation common

A

common - esp small breeds but also bulldogs, labs and lateral in flat coats

27
Q

soft tissue shoulder imaging

A

radiography - mineralisation of infra/supraspinatus tendons
ultrasound of biceps tendon
ct/mri both useful
arthroscopy is gold standard

28
Q

infraspinatus contracture

A

rare progressive- working breeds
characteristic limb posture
fibrotic infraspinatus needs to be cut

29
Q

humeral intracondylar fissure

A

young-middle age
chronic forelimb lameness, muscle atrophy, elbow swelling, pain on manipulation
multiple views to visualise fissure
ct best - fissure/sclerosis will be visible
treat - rest/non steroidals or transcondylar screw

30
Q

carpal hyperextension injuries

A

palmar carpal ligaments and cartilage damaged. swollen with palmargrade stance can occur with destructive arthritis
treated by partial or pancarpal arthrodesis

31
Q

incomplete ossification of radiocarpal bone

A

boxers/springers
treat with pancarpal arthrodesis

32
Q

plantar ligament degeneration

A

proximal intertarsal subluxation with bilateral changes
plantigrade stance
treated by arthrodesis

33
Q

gastrocnemius tendinopathy

A

chronic hindlimb lameness, often bilateral, relatively common
painful achilles swelling, mineralisation on radiograph
resect tendon and place calcaneal screw (not best results) tibial/transarticular external fixator or pantarsal arthrodesis

34
Q

predilection sites for osteosarcoma

A

proximal humerous, distal radius, proximal tibia, distal femur
fail to cross the joint
femur head in racing greyhounds

35
Q

how do bony neoplasias appear on xray

A

proliferative lesions - radiopaque
destructive lesions - radiolucent

36
Q

histology of bony neoplasia

A

jamshidi needles for histology

37
Q

treatment of bone tumours

A

limb amputation in smaller breeds
chemotherapy
pain relief

38
Q

nerve root tumours

A

marked muscle atrophy of one limb
can occur in brachial/lumbosacral plexuses

39
Q

treatment for patella fractures

A

with limited distraction - conservative management
marked distraction - circumfrential wire, tension band, pin/tension band

40
Q

osteoarthritis

A

fraying of articular cartilage
exposure of subchondral done to synovial fluid leading to scleroses and osteophyte formation/remodelling

41
Q

classification of ligament injuries

A

first - few broken collagen fibre, swelling - rest/NSAIDs
second - marked fibre damage, haematoma, loss of function, support, rest, nsaids
third - complete rupture/avulsion, repair if possible

42
Q

joint luxations

A

incongruent - joint surfaces abnormal in shape/do not articulate well
dysplasia - abnormal joint development
subluxation - joint surface displaces but some contact maintained
luxation - no joint contact

43
Q

can dogs get pododermatitis

A

yes

44
Q

what is paronychia

A

bacterial infection in nail base

45
Q

what is onychomycosis

A

fungal infection in multiple nail beds

46
Q

with facial trauma how should you secure the airway

A

tracheotomy tube

47
Q

how can you stabilise mandibular fractures

A

acrylic bonding of canines

48
Q

is mandibular symphyseal separation common

A

yes - fix with wire caudal to canine teeth