Congenital and neuromuscular conditions Flashcards

1
Q

What is osteogenesis imperfect?

A

AKA brittle bone disease
defect in the synthesis or organisation of type 1 collagen
thin osteopenia “gracile” bones
fractures heal wth abundant callus

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2
Q

What are the differences between the milder and rarer cases of osteogenesis inperfecta

A

Milder cases- autosomal dominant with multiple fragility fractures, blue sclerae, hearing loss

Rarer cases- autosomal recessive and may be fatal in perinatal period or accosted with severe sclerosis and deformity

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3
Q

What is skeletal dysplasia?

A

Genetic disorder leading to short stature

can be proportionate or disproportionate

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4
Q

What is the treatment for skeletal dysplasia?

A

Supportive-preventing spinal cord and nerve compression, joint instability and deformity

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5
Q

Where is connective tissue derived from and what does it contain

A

embryonically from mesoderm
contain collagen ( usually type 1) and elastin, ground substance , H2O
cells inc fibroblasts,macrophages and leucocytes

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6
Q

What is Marfans

A

autosomal dominant or sporadic mutation of fibrillar gene
fibrillar required as a scaffold for elastin
results in tall stature, long limbs, hyper mobility and arachnodactyly

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7
Q

What is Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome

A

usually autosomal dominant defect of one of a number of genes involved in collagen and elastin formation- more than 10 types
joint hyper mobility and dislocations
early onset OA
atrophic scars and poor wound healing
ease of bruising
scoliosis, kyphosis,cardiac abnormalities
occipital-atlanto instability, myelopathy,spinal cord tethering

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8
Q

What is Down syndrome?

A

trisomy 21
joint laxity predisposes to recurrent dislocations and oa
atlanto-axial instability - may lead to spinal cord compression( myelopathy)

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9
Q

What is Duchenne muscular dystrophy?

A

x-linked recessive (boys only)
Defect in dystrophin calcium transport–> progressive muscle weakness as boys grow older
Gowers sign on standing raised creatinine phosphoinase
scoliosis
progressive cardiac and respiratory failte
usually death in 20s

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10
Q

What age do people with kickers muscular dystrophy die

A

30s to 40s

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11
Q

What is tellies equinovarus?

A

deformity of foot aka clubfoot
50% cases bilateral
M:F (2-1)
Abnormal alignment talus,calcaneous and navicular
RF- + FH,breech,oligohydramnios
may be part of generalised skeletal dyspasia
higher risk DDH

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12
Q

What is the treatment for talipes equinovarus?

A

Ponsetti technique-90% successful
casting for around 9 weeks
boots and bar 23h per day 3 months then night time up to 4 years
risk of recurrence
refractory cases may need complex surgery

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13
Q

In terms of limb abnormalities and deficiencies if they are not genetically determined when are they likely to have occurred?

A

insult to the developing limb bud around 4th-6th weeks gestation

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14
Q

What is the commonest malformation

A

Syndactyly –> failure of the separation of the digits

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15
Q

What is fibular hemmimelia?

A

partial or complete absence of the fibula
associated with shortening of the leg, bowing of the tibia an deformity of the ankle
Mild- limb lengthening with circular frame external fixator
severe- amputation at 10 months to 2 years

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16
Q

Who is obstetric brachial plexus injury most common in?

A

Large babies (macrosomia, diabetes), twin deliveries and shoulder dystocia

17
Q

What is era’s palsy?

A

upper brachial plexus (C5 and C6 roots)

  • weakness deltoid, supraspinatus, infraspinatus, biceps, brachial
  • internal rotation from unopposed subscapularis–> waiter’s tip posture
  • return biceps function by 6 months carries good prognosis
  • no recovery- release contractors and tendon transfers
18
Q

Klumpke’s Palsy

A

lower brachial plexus injury from traction on abducted arm
–> paralysis intrinsic hand muscles +- finger and wrist flexors
prognosis poorer than for Erbs

19
Q

What is cerebral palsy?

A

due to an insult to eh immature brain before 3 years of age
often intrauterine- genetic abnormalities, brain malformation and intrauterine infection
variable expression depending on area of brain affected

20
Q

What are the different types of cerebral palsy?

A

Spastic (80%)-motor cortex affected
Ataxic
Athenoid-uncontrolled writhing (basal ganglia)
Dystonic-Repetative movements (basal ganglia)

21
Q

What does hemiplegic mean

A

ipsilateral arm and leg affected (CP)

22
Q

What does diplegia mean

A

legs only affected (CP)

23
Q

What is the treatment for CP

A
Baclofen (inducing intrathecal)
Botox injection
Neurosurgical procedures (rhizotomy)

joint contractures- surgical release,fusions

24
Q

What is spina bifida?

A

Failure of fusion of posterior vertebral arch

25
Q

What is mild spina bifida?

A

Sina bifida oculta

may be birth mark, skin tag, lipoma or hairy patch
can cause tethering spinal cord and roots
-Pes Casvus ( high arch) and clawing of toes
-Bladder/bowel problems

26
Q

What is severe spina bifida?

A

sina bifida cyctica

no skin coverage
herniation of meninges (meningocele) or roots of caudal equine (myelomeningocele)

may be associated with hydrocephalus (build up of CSF in the brain-treatment is a shunt)

27
Q

In myelomeningocele there is normally no neurological defect T/F

A

F
Meningocele usually no neurological defecit
Myelomeningocele usually motor and sensory defect below level of lesions - most never walk independently

28
Q

What is the treatment of spina bifida?

A

early closure within 48h of birth

may need scoliosis correction, procedures for hips, releases contractors,foot surgery

29
Q

What is polio?

A

Viral infection of anterior horn cells in spinal cord or brainstem

30
Q

How does polio enter?

A

Entry via GI tract, flu like illness and subsequent paralysis of group of muscles one or more limbs within 2-3 days

31
Q

Treatment for polio

A

splint/brace/caliper may help
tendon transfer
joitn fusons
leg lengthening