Wrist and Hand Flashcards

1
Q

How to distinguish if nerve entrapment is in hand or elbow with carpal tunnel?
2. How would you differentiate between median nerve problem and nerve root lesion?

A

Carpal tunnel will have no sensory motor loss on the thenar eminence - the recurrent branch of the median nerve will be spared as it passes over the retinaculum.
-the palmar branch of median nerve exits proximal to CT, this more likely to produce symptoms in a pronator terres syndrome

  1. NRL will have affected reflexes but median nerve won’t
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2
Q

How is it that you can get Ulnar nerve and artery compression?
What will symptoms be?

A

The Guyons canal which is the depression between the pisiforms and hook of hamate?

Entrapment may cause motor, sensory or mixed deficits depending on side of compression.

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3
Q

What do you have to be careful of when adjusting the wrist?

A

If person has had an injury it can predispose them to hyper mobility - if you adjust could give them chronic pain.
There is tendency for wrist to be hyper mobile so evaluate first before adjusting.

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4
Q

Just list all the possible disorders of the wrist.

7

A
  • carpal tunnel syndrome
  • Ulnar nerve entrapment
  • De Quervain’s Tenosynovitis
  • Triangular Fibrocartilage complex (TFCC) injury
  • Ganglion
  • Scaphoid Fracture
  • Colles fracture
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5
Q

How would you evaluate the wrist and hand?

A
  • look at symmetry, atrophy, colour, swelling
  • ROM- active, passive +resisted if indicated
  • Palpation- inflammation or pain, anatomical snuff box, extensor carpi radials brevis + longus tendons , joint play
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6
Q

TOS may be the cause of whole hand symptoms.
What are the 3 potential sources of compression of the neuromuscular bundle.

What are the symptoms of TOS?

A
  1. Scalenes
  2. Between clavicle and first rib
  3. Under pec minor

Symptoms:

  1. Vascular (subclavian artery)- vascular insufficiency to upper limb esp. hand
  2. Neurogenic (brachial plexus)
    - sensory and/or motor disturbances to entire hand due to generalised involvement of bachial plexus
    - different to CTS- as thenar eminence isn’t spared.
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7
Q

What ortho tests would you do to test what?

A
  1. Phalens test- for carpal tunnel syndrome
  2. Finkelsteins test- for DeQuervains tendosynovitis
  3. Scaphoid compression test- scaphoid fracture
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8
Q

Read treatment of CTS

A

j

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9
Q

Whats symptoms of carpal tunnel and who are you more likely to see it in?

A

-mean age 45-60yrs Female> male
symptoms:
-numbness, paresthesia, and pain in median nerve distribution
-loss of grip strength, dropping of objects (hand weakness)

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10
Q

Whats De Quervains Tendosynovitis?

What must you differentiate it from?

A

Inflammation of extensor pollicis brevis and abductor pollicis longs tendons
-Repetative ulnar deviation is m.c cause
C6 dermatome and C7 sclerotome

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11
Q

Review biomechanics on slide 13 How do you get scapholunate instability

A
  • due to disruption of scapholunate ligament following a FOOSH injury
  • Gap seen on X-ray
  • treated well with surgery.
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12
Q

Triangular fibrocartilage complex (TFCC) Injuries.
How do they happen?
What are the signs and symptoms?

A

TFCC functions as cushion for the ulnar carpus as well as a sling support for the lunate and triquestrum
-MOI usually compression of TFCC between the lunate and the head of the ulna, as in FOOSH, or rotational forces as in racket throwing and throwing sports.

Signs and symptoms:

  • ulnar-side wrist pain & swelling, including point tenderness distal to the ulnar styloid in the area of the TFCC
  • loss of grip strength
  • may be a click with active ulnar deviation
  • pain with passive pronation and supination (rotation) as well as with ulnar deviation
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13
Q

Ganglion
trigger finger
what are they?
treatments?

A

Ganglion/ dorsal ganglion cyst (expansion of synovial capsule)
-herniation of the dorsal scapholunate ligament.
Treatment? immobilisation, corticosteroid injection (if symptomatic), surgery- but reoccurrence is likely.

Trigger finger: -they try to open their hand, it sticks then snaps open.
Cause: narrowing of synovial sheath surrounding flexor tendons. A palpable nodule is often present within tendon due to telescoping of the sheath.
m.c in females and diabetic patients.

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14
Q

Scaphoid fracture.
why is it more susceptible to fracture?
complication?

A

because it is between the radius and triquetrum? na its coz its unique position bridging the proximal and distal rows of the carpal bones.
-MOI is FOOSH with extension and radial deviation.

Complication? AVN- only 1 dorsoradial artery to proximal pole, so 30% get AVN depending on location of fracture.
-AVN doenst show on initial x-rau so should repeat within the 10 days.

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15
Q

Colles fracture
Boxes fracture
MOI?

A

Colles? Distal radius fracture
FOOSH

Boxers fracture:
5th metacarpal neck fracture.

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