4: Spinal deformity and red flags Flashcards

1
Q

What are

a) red flag
b) yellow flag symptoms of back pain?

A

a) Aspects of history suggesting serious underlying pathology (e.g cancer, infection)

b) Social/behavioural factors indicating that patient outcome will be poor unless resolved

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2
Q

What ages of patient with back pain are red flags?

A

< 20 years old

> 60 years old

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3
Q

What type of back pain is a red flag?

A

Constant non-mechanical pain

(differential: inflammatory arthritis - spondyloarthropathy, infection)

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4
Q

If a patient has a past history of ___ their back pain should be taken very seriously.

A

cancer

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5
Q

Patients using which type of drug should be treated seriously if presenting with back pain?

Why?

A

Steroids

Osteoporosis

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6
Q

What are three signs of cauda equina syndrome?

A

Saddle anaesthesia

Loss of bowel and bladder control

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7
Q

Cauda equina syndrome is described as bilateral ___ with loss of ___ and ___ control.

A

sciatica

bowel, bladder

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8
Q

How long do you have to treat cauda equina syndrome?

How is it treated?

A

Around 48 hours

Decompression

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9
Q

What type of bladder problems are seen in cauda equina syndrome?

A

Painless urine retention

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10
Q

What causes cauda equina syndrome?

A

Disc prolapse

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11
Q

How are patients with suspected spinal fractures assessed?

A

Immobilise on spinal board

X-ray / CT scan

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12
Q

Do sensory and motor nerves have to be affected at the same spinal level?

A

No

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13
Q

Which aspect of the cervical spine is important to examine on an X-ray?

A

C7/T1

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14
Q

Where do thoracolumbar spinal injuries tend to occur?

A

T12 / L1

i.e the junction between thoracic and lumbar

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15
Q

What is more likely to kill a patient than moving their damaged spine?

A

Ischaemia / poor oxygenation from position they’re in

So move them if you need to

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16
Q

Spinal cord injuries can be either ___ or ___.

A

complete , incomplete

17
Q

What type of abnormal movement tends to cause an incomplete central cord injury?

What are affected more severely - the arms or the legs?

A

Hyperextension of spine

Arms worse than legs

18
Q

If a patient with ankylosing spondylitis has a suspected spine fracture, how should they be immobilised?

A

In their “natural” position i.e with face pointing towards the ground

19
Q

People with ankylosing spondylosis tend to have very (stable / unstable) spine injuries.

A

unstable

20
Q

What is scoliosis?

A

Lateral curvature of the spine

21
Q

Scoliosis caused by an unbalanced number of growth plates on either side of the spine, seen from birth, is called ___ scoliosis.

A

congenital

22
Q

What causes scoliosis?

A

Idiopathic

nobody knows

23
Q

The centre of gravity working on the spine is anterior.

What stops your spine from becoming kyphotic?

A

Structural support of bones

Erector spinae muscles

24
Q

What is spondylolysis?

A

Umbrella term for degenerative disease affecting the spine

25
Q

What is spondylolitshesis?

What can this cause?

A

Anterior / posterior movement of vertebrae

Pressure on nerve roots - sciatica amongst other things

26
Q

Spondylolisthesis is graded from 1 - 5 based on severity.

What name is given to Grade 5 spondylolisthesis?

A

Spondyloptosis

spine has literally detached from itself