medial sprains and chronic ankle instability Flashcards

1
Q

What are the causes of medial ankle sprain?

A

excessive EV

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2
Q

what are structures involved in medial ankle sprains

A

-Ligaments
*Deltoid
3 that connect Tibia with Talus, Calcaneus, and Navicular
Reinforces medial arch

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3
Q

other structures that maybe involved with medial ankle sprains are?

A

-Ligaments
*Subtalar or Talocalcaneal ligaments
Intraarticular: Posterior interosseous
Extraarticular: Medial Talocalcaneal

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4
Q

Medial sprains structured that are involved with bones?

A

Bone
-Avulsion fx of medial malleolus
-Fx of lateral malleolus due to compression with excessive EV
-Epiphyseal plate- medial malleolus
-Muscles/Tendons- possible Tibialis Posterior strain and/or subluxation if flexor retinaculum torn

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5
Q

What are medial Sprains symptoms?

A

-Sudden onset with trauma with foot turning outward
-Medial ankle P!/swelling
-Limited and P!ful ROM, especially turning outward
-Difficult and painful weight bearing

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6
Q

What are signs of medial sprains

A

-Observation
*Swelling and possible ecchymosis
*Antalgic and asymmetrical gait
-Ottawa and Bernese Ankle Clinical Decision Rules (CDR)- determine need for radiographs89
-ROM- primary limited and P!ful EV
-Resisted/MMT- possible weak and P!ful IV

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7
Q

signs of the medial ankle

A

-Special Tests- (+) medial ligamentous tests

-Talocrural: Generally, with Anterior and Reverse Anterior Drawer
Specific medial ligament tests for Deltoid ligaments

-Subtalar: Generally, with medial Calcaneal glide (higher sens/spec)
Specific with Posterior interosseous and medial lig tests

-TTP over involved structures

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8
Q

what are syndesmotic sprains?

A

aka high ankle sprain

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9
Q

what are the causes of syndesmotic sprains?

A

primarily DF (Talus wider anteriorly than posteriorly) so excessive Talar posterior glide with ER aka peeling mechanism, possibly EV

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10
Q

what structures are involved with a syndesmotic sprain?

A

Ligaments in the following order
1st- AITFL
2nd- Interosseous membrane or syndesmosis
3rd- PITFL
4th- Deltoid ligs

Bone- Talar or distal Tibia/Fibular Fx

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11
Q

what are symptoms of a syndesmotic sprain

A

*Sudden onset with trauma typically with ankle bent up
*Often anterior ankle P!/swelling
*Limited and P!ful ROM, especially bending ankle up
*Difficult and painful weight bearing

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12
Q

What are this signs o syndesmotic sprains

A

Observation
*Swelling and possible ecchymosis
*Antalgic and asymmetrical gait
*Ottawa and Bernese Ankle Clinical Decision Rules (CDR)- determine need for radiographs89
*ROM- primary limited and P!ful DF and possibly EV
*Resisted/MMT- possibly weak and P!ful, no real specific direction

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13
Q

signs of syndesmotic sprains?

A

Special Tests
(+) ligamentous tests
Inferior TibFib
Generally, with Reverse Posterior Drawer
Specific with Fibular ant/post translation (LR+ = 6.8; LR- = .2)
-Possibly same as medial sprain
*Single leg hop test if able- inability is MOST sens syndesmotic test

*TTP over involved structures

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14
Q

What is chronic Ankle instability

A

-aka CAI
-Presence of functional or mechanical instability39

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15
Q

what are the risk factors of chronic ankle instability

A

-Increased talar curvature
-Lack of external support
-Lack of coordination training following a prior sprain

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15
Q

what are the causes of chronic ankle instability

A

-Past severe and/or recurrent sprain(s)
-80% re-injury rate following an IV sprain42

16
Q

What are chronic ankle instability signs and symptoms

A

Possible acute S&S if aggravated39, 89 otherwise may be asymptomatic

17
Q

What are chronic ankle instability signs and symptoms

A

-↓ed postural stability/proprioception39, 89 and plantar sensation127, 133
-Altered muscle activation patterns39, 89
-Aberrant joint motion39, 89
-Fibula is significantly more lateral from tibia120… could use a caliper to measure

18
Q

What are the PT Rx of a sprain?

A

90% successful25

19
Q

POLICED
Possibly brief period of immobilization and/or assistive device11, 89

A

POLICED
Possibly brief period of immobilization and/or assistive device11, 89

20
Q

what are PT Rx for sprains with modalities?

A

-Cryotherapy benefits with P!, swelling, needing less meds, and gait11, 89
-Weak evidence for diathermy and LASER11, 89, 129
-Conflicting evidence for electrotherapy11, 89
-US should NOT be used with acute sprains11, 89
-Acupuncture- conflicting evidence11

21
Q

PT RX for Bracing (sprains)

A

Bracing/Taping prn for protection/function

*Bracing- reduced risk11 and frequency22 but NOT severity with basketball22

22
Q

PT Rx for sprains

A

*Standard- mechanical support significantly decreased after 30 minutes of exercise21

*Talar technique to limit anterior glide

*Distal Tib Fib Technique
-Indication: high ankle sprains
-Limits separation and anterior distal fibular glide

23
Q

PT RX with MT

A

*STM including lymphatic drainage for swelling

*JM with MET
-ROM, proprioception, and tissue tolerances89
-AP talar mobes11
-Hypo analgesic effect and subsequent increased ROM

24
Q

What is the MET for Sprains?

A

Ultimately for tissue proliferation (acute) and stabilization (acute and chronic)

25
Q

what are MET for sprains?

A

Positional/Directional biases?
Lateral ankle sprain
Medial ankle sprain
High ankle sprain

26
Q

PT RX for sprains; MET for Balance and Neuromuscular training11

A

-Prevents reoccurrences42
-Improved balance and inversion joint position sense, and greater motor neuron excitability (reaction time)

27
Q

Prognosis to return to

A

Grade I: 1-2 weeks40
Avg. 7.2 days with track and field athletes

Grade II: 2-6 weeks40
Avg. 15 days with track and field athletes

Grade III
> 6 weeks40
Avg. 30-55 days with track and field athletes146

28
Q

Sprains
MD Rx-CAI Sx

A

*NO procedure is better than another

*Early functional rehabilitation appears superior to 6 wks immobilization in restoring early function