Pathophysiology of the Hip Flashcards

1
Q

Anteversion

A

Femoral head faces anterior in the acetabulum

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2
Q

The hip is the….

A

Largest weight bearing joint in the body

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3
Q

Someone with excessive anteversion will..

A

Walk with excessive internal rotation

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4
Q

Orientation of acetabulum

A

Lateral
Slightly inferior
Slightly anterior

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5
Q

Angle of inclination of the femur

A
125 degrees is normal
Less than 125 degrees is coxa vera
-More shear forces
More than 125 degrees is coxa valga
-More compression forces
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6
Q

Angle of torsion

A

Anteversion or retroversion

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7
Q

Adult pathophysiologies of the hip

A
Degenerative Joint disease
Hip fracture
Traumatic dislocation
Avascular necrosis of the femoral head
Bursitis
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8
Q

Osteochondritis can be a cause of..

A

Atraumatic hip fracture

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9
Q

Percentage of falls resulting in hip fracture

A

5%

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10
Q

One of every ___ white women will have a hip fx in their lifetime

A

6

90% occur in persons 65 or older

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11
Q

Hip fx prognosis

A

Approximately 4% of people die after a hip fracture because of:
-Complications
-Surgical treatment
-Immobilization consequences
25% over 64 years old die within 1 year
10% over 64 years old become functionally dependent

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12
Q

Hip fracture zone of weakness

A

Bottom of the neck of the femur

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13
Q

Types of hip fracture

A

Femoral shaft fracture
Intertrochanteric (Extra-capsular)
Femoral neck fracture (Intracapsular)

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14
Q

Femoral Neck fracture

A

Difficult to manage
Most common >60 years old
Females more than men

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15
Q

Garden’s classification of intracapsular fractures of femoral neck

A

Type I: Incomplete
Type II: Complete but undisplaced
Type III: Partially displaced
Type IV: Completely displaced

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16
Q

Type III and IV Garden fractures of femoral neck have high rates of…

A

Avascular necrosis of the femoral head

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17
Q

Do hip fracture undershorts work?

A

No

18
Q

Hip Bursitis Pathology

A

Inflammation of the bursa

19
Q

Hip Bursitis Etiology

A
  • Direct blow or impact in area of greater trochanter

- Friction due to overuse

20
Q

Hip bursitis clinical picture

A

Pain on the outside of the hip

  • May worsen with activity
  • Pain upon palpation of greater trochanter
  • Intense pain and swelling near greater trochanter
  • Pain that travels down the thigh at night
21
Q

Hip Bursitis Medical Management

A
Rest
Aspiration of the bursa
Anti-Inflammatory medication
Steroid injection + Rest
Orthotics
22
Q

Traumatic Dislocation

A
Can dislocate anterior or posteriorly
-Most common posteriorly
MOI
-Dashboard injury
-Fall onto flexed knee
23
Q

Avascular necrosis of femoral head

A

Blood supply to the femoral head and neck is compromised

-May be a tear of the ligamentum teres

24
Q

Congenital Pathophysiology of the hip

A
  • Developmental dysplasia
  • Congenital Hip Dislocation, Infantile hip dislocation, Congenital dislocation of the hip
  • Slipped femoral Capital epiphysis
  • Legg-Perthes disease
25
Q

Congenital Dislocation incidence

A

.25-.85% of newborns
Males 8 times more likely
Most unilateral; usually on the left

26
Q

Congenital Dislocation Etiology

A

Perinatal or post natal
Ligamentous laxity of joint capsule
Breech presentation at birth

27
Q

Congenital Dislocation clinical picture

A

Most stabilize in the first 2 months

Cannot predict who would and would not stabilize

28
Q

CHD Physical signs

A

Assymetry in ROM, gluteal folds, thigh folds
Leg length discrepency
Trendelenburg
Flexion contractures

29
Q

Developmental Dysplasia of the hip

A

Children w/ spasticity:

  • IS pulls down and adductors initiate force
  • Medial joint capsule compressed and femoral head pushed lateral
  • IS insertion becomes COM
  • Femoral head displaces completely laterally and dislocates posteriorly with further hip flexion
30
Q

Slipped femoral capital epiphysis description

A

Unusual disorder of adolescent hip characterized by a posterior slippage of the head of the femur

31
Q

Slipped femoral capital epiphysis etiology

A

Weakness of the growth plate, may occur shortly after puberty

32
Q

Slipped femoral capital epiphysis clinical picture

A

X rays confirm diagnosis

-Antalgic gait, reluctance to weight bear

33
Q

Slipped femoral capital epiphysis treatment

A

ORIF

34
Q

Legg-Calve-Perthes disease

A

Osteochondrosis of femoral head

  • Epiphyseal aseptic necrosis of the head of the femur
  • slipped capital epiphysis
35
Q

Leg-Calve-Perthes disease etiology

A

Unknown and insidious onset
1/1200 children between age 3-12
Primarily affects white males (4x more)

36
Q

Pathophysiology of Leg-Calve-Perthes disease

A

Predictable, self-limiting course during 12-36 month period
Lack of blood to femoral head leads to aseptic necrosis w/ softening and resorption of bone
Revascularization results in reossification
Four stages

37
Q

Four stages of Leg-Calve-Perthes disease

A

Synovitis
Avascular
Resorption
Regeneration

38
Q

Impairments related to Legg-Calve-Perthes disease

A
  • Pain in groin, thigh and knee, especially with walking and running
  • Antalgic gait
  • Decreased ROM and atrophy of gluteal and thigh muscles
39
Q

Clinical implications of legg-calve-perthes disease

A
  • Femoral head may become flattened
  • Resolves with little hip deformity if treated appropriately
  • Goal is to limit deformity by preventing stress on femoral head and keeping it within the joint capsule
  • Utilize A frame, hip spica, abduction
40
Q

Differential diagnosis

A

Past medical or surgical hx
Diagnostic imaging
Night pain
Sequence of diagnostic movements