Ortho/neuros Flashcards

1
Q

When can infant roll prone to supine

A

4 months

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2
Q

When can infant sit using tripod position

A

6 months

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3
Q

When do infants begin creeping

A

9 months

9 rhymes with mine - creeps be thinking, “you’re mine”

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4
Q

When do infants stand without support momentarily

A

12 months (cut off for when typically pathological 18 months)

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5
Q

Polydactyly v. syndactyly

A

Too many fingers toes

Some of them are fused

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6
Q

True or false; newborns under 2 months typically have “twitching” movements - normal variant

A

false; movements should always be symmetric with no twitching (newborns will naturally have flexed position though)

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7
Q

What is the “Gower sign” What is it suggestive of?

A

Child rises from sitting by placing hands on legs and pushing way up (crawl up their legs)

Muscular dystrophy

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8
Q

Early signs of muscular dystrophy

A

clumsiness
difficulty climbing stairs
frequent falls

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9
Q

Muscle atrophy & progressive weakness
pseudohypertrophy from fatty infiltration
Gower sign

A

muscular dystrophy

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10
Q

Barlow’s and Ortolani’s test are both looking for what?

A

Hip dysplasia (not as reliable >3 months as muscles and ligaments strengthen)

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11
Q

3 causes of hip dysplasia

A

Acetabular dysplasia (delayed ossification of acetabulum)

Subluxation

Dislocation

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12
Q

Of the 3 causes of hip dysplasia - which is the only one to cause loss of contact of femoral head with acetabular capsule

A

dislocation

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13
Q

What is Allis sign looking for?

A

DDx hip dislocation v. shortened femur

A positive would be one knee appearing lower than the other

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14
Q

What is the Barlow maneuver? How is it different than Ortolani (considering they’re both looking for same thing)

A

Barlow you ADduct thigh and press down

Ortolani you ABduct thigh

Both are positive if feel “palpable clunk”

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15
Q

True or false; hip dysplasia is MC in females

A

true - commonly associated with intrauterine constraint (breech)

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16
Q

What is MC brachial plexus injury due to birth trauma

A

Erb’s palsy (C5/C6) - large infant/shoulder dystocia

Causes paralyzed arm “waiter’s tip” sign

17
Q

True or false; an infant with erb’s palsy (C5/C6) will have absent Moro, biceps, radial, and grasp reflexes

A

false; all are absent EXCEPT grasp

18
Q

What is one of the MC missed findings on infants (hint due to birth trauma)

A

Fractured clavicle (eventually lump or callus forms)

19
Q

True or false; common for infants to present with pes planus, metatarsus adductus or tibial torsion

A

true

20
Q

True or false; pes planus (flat feet) is normal until 3 years of age when longitudinal arch should form

A

true

21
Q

What is the MC congenital foot deformity

A

Metatarsus adductus (forefoot adduction)

22
Q

True or false; metatarsus adductus can be seen on plain film

A

true tarsometatarsal joints angled medial

23
Q

What is tibial torsion - what is it caused by

A

slight varus curvature of the tibia

Related to fetal positioning

Expected to resolved afters months/years of weight bearing

24
Q

How do you asses for tibial torsion

A

Lay patient prone, flex knee, one thumb on lateral malleolous, other thumb on lateral knee - if thumbs don’t line up = + test

25
Q

What seated position is related to femoral anteversion?

A

Reverse tailor position

Sitting knees forward feet pointed posterior and lateral to body

26
Q

What gender is MC for femoral anteversion? What is happening to the femur to cause it?

A

Females

femurs is twisted medially (patella faces inward)

27
Q

True or false; genu varum is common in toddlers up to 18 months

A

true

should be investigated further if asymmetry between the tibiofemoral angles or space between knees >1.5 inches

28
Q

When is genu valgum common?

A

2-4 years

investigate further if asymmetry between tibiofemoral angle or space between ankles >2 inches

29
Q

When can infant raise head (prone)

A

2 months