Upper Extremity Injury: Clinical Correlations Flashcards

1
Q

types of fractures

A

acute
stress
pathologic

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2
Q

acute fracture mechanisms

A

from sudden impact of large force exceeding strength of bone

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3
Q

stress fracture mechanism

A

from repetitive sub maximal stresses

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4
Q

pathologic fracture mechanism

A

from normal forces to diseased bone

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5
Q

what to look for on a fracture exam?

A

deformity
bleeding +/- fragment=suspect open fracture=orthopadeic emergency=needs to be surgically washed out asap!
bony point tenderness
pain with loading bone (indirect loading especially useful)

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6
Q

indirect loading tests

A

axial loading
bump test
fulcrum test
hop test

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7
Q

fracture diagnostics-what imaging can be used?

A

plain x-rays
CT scans
bone scan
MRI

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8
Q

fracture treatments

A

immobilization (in general)

avoidance of NSAIDs (some animal studies and models show NSAIDs interfere with bony healing via PGs)

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9
Q

what diagnosis are you most concerned with when addressing a FOOSH injury?

A

scaphoid fracture

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10
Q

bones with “vulnerable” blood supplies-retrograde areas and watershed regions

A

retrograde areas: scaphoid, talus, and femoral head

watershed region: central (tarsal) navicular

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11
Q

snuffbox contents

A

radial nerve
cephalic vein
radial artery
scaphoid bone (deepest part)

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12
Q

what vasculature innervation do you worry about becoming compromised with a femoral head fracture?

A

medial circumflex femoral artery=most important blood supply to the head and neck of the femur
–the artery of ligament of the femoral head only gets a small amount of innervation from this

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13
Q

what would you find in the history and exam in a patient with arthritis?

A
history:
     stiffness-especially after rest
     worse after prolonged use
exam:
     joint line tenderness
     mild swelling
     deformity
     symptoms with both passive and active motions
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14
Q

Adhesive capsulitis-findings and causes/risks

A

capsular thickening
-see inflammation and scarring
idiopathic or post injury
-risk factors: injury, diabetes, thyroid disease

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15
Q

Adhesive capsulitis history

A

limited range-of-motion (ROM)

  • painful early stage with decreasing ROM (freeze phase)
  • non-painful with stable, decreased ROM (frozen phase)
  • non-painful with improving ROM (thawing phase)
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16
Q

what would you see on a adhesive capsulitis exam?

A

decreased ROM
gradual tightening endpoint
exam otherwise consistent with underlying etiology

17
Q

Adhesive capsulitis treatment

A

reassurance
educate and set expectations
maintenance of ROM
pain control

18
Q

key components to treatments of musculotendinous ruptrues

A

impact of absence of muscle
presence of alternative muscles
functional requirements of patient

19
Q

enthesopathy

A

disorder of muscular or tendinous bony attachment

20
Q

tendinitis

A

technically acute inflammation of tendon

traumatic=blow or pull

21
Q

tendinosis

A

chronic degenerative condition of tendon

chronic=submaximal repetitive irritation

22
Q

strain

A

muscle fiber damage from over stretching

-eccentric loading (muscle lengthening during firing)

23
Q

strain symptoms

A

stiffness
bruising
swelling
soreness

24
Q

acromioclavicular (AC) sprain etiology, presentation, and exam findings

A

etiology-most commonly fall directly onto shoulder
presentation-pain with overhead motions, deformity of superior shoulder
exam:
-pain and deformity at the AC joint
-pain with cross body adduction of arm (positive cross-chest test)
-painful arc of abduction over 150 degrees

25
Q

AC injury grading

A

grade I=AC ligament injury
grade II=AC ligament tear and coracoclavicular (CC) ligament stretch
grade III=complete tears of both AC and CC ligaments
grade IV=complete tears of both AC and CC ligaments and clavicular displacement

26
Q

sprain

A

ligamentous damage from overloading

27
Q

symptoms of sprain

A

instability or laxity

swelling

28
Q

sprain grading (pathology and exam findings)

A

grade I=microscopic damage; on exam: no increased laxity, but pain with stress
gade II=partial tear; on exam: increased laxity and pain
grade III=complete tear; on exam: significant laxity

29
Q

which nerve innervation can become compromised in a patient with an anterior shoulder dislocation? How do you test whether or not this nerve is working?

A

axillary and radial nerves
to test the axillary nerve, test deltoid abduction motion–supraspinatus is responsible for the first 30 degrees of abduction, deltoid is responsible for abduction of the shoulder past 30 degrees

30
Q

joint stability…difference between dislocation, sub laxation and laxity

A

dislocation=complete displacement
sublaxation=transient, partial displacement
laxity=normal variant in “joint looseness”

31
Q

shoulder dislocation…epidemiology and etiology

A

epidemiology=anterior shoulder dislocations-90%
etiology=forced extension, abduction, and external rotation of the arm (eg. open arm tackle or fall onto abducted arm); direct blow to posterior shoulder

32
Q

findings in a patient with a dislocated shoulder

A

-arm held by opposite hand in slight abduction and external rotation
-alteration of shoulder contour including:
prominent acromion
humeral head anterior to acromion and adjacent to coracoid
-check sensation of axillary and musculocutaneous nerves
-positive apprehension test-feeling of instability with stress

33
Q

carpal tunnel syndrome

A

parathesias in the velar side of the radial 3.5 digits, thenar wasting (late finding)