Patient Presentation - Hip Flashcards

1
Q

what are the roles of the GP in presentation of hip pain?

A
history
physical exam
investigations
options of diagnosis
management
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2
Q

important parts of history?

A

pain and loss of function are subjective so focus on how the problem affects the individual

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3
Q

components of physical examination of hip?

A

look (deformity, asymmetry, scars)
feel (swelling, bony landmarks, tenderness heat)
Move (range of movement, stiffness, pain on movement)

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4
Q

how is hip pain investigated?

A

only X ray if it will affect management (only 38% need x ray)
ESR/viscosity
FBC (infection)
calcium, alkaline phosphatase

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5
Q

radiological features of OA?

A

loss of joint space
osteophytes
sclerosis
subarticular cyst

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6
Q

how can hip pain be managed?

A
education
weight loss
home adaption (occ therapy)
walking aids
analgesia
NSAIDs (short term)
physio
complementary medicines
mobility allowance, blue badge etc
surgery = last resort
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7
Q

what factors affect whether or not to refer a patient?

A
pain level (night?)
loss of function
physical fitness
mental fitness
support at home
patient expectations
age of patient
uncertain about diagnosis
balance between benefit and risk basically
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8
Q

list 5 common causes of hip pain

A
OA
rheumatoid arthritis and other arthritides (e.g ankylosing spondylitis)
fracture
referred from back
malignancy
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9
Q

list 4 rarer causes of hip pain

A

soft tissue (bursitis, snapped ilio-psoas tendon)
pagets disease
infection (septic etc)
avascular necrosis

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10
Q

how is an infection within a hip replacement managed?

A

if < 3 months, can do a washout

if after 3 months need to remove the hip and leave it out for up to 6 months

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11
Q

total vs semi hip replacement?

A
total = replace acetabulum and femoral head?
semi = ?
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12
Q

how is the acetabulum replaced?

A

acetabulum grinded down with cheese grater like ball

cement or non-cemented cup inserted into the hole

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13
Q

how is the femoral head replaced?

A

cut at the femoral neck

canal created by removing bone marrow from middle and femoral stem (cemented or non-cemented) inserted into the canal

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14
Q

cemented vs non-cemented stem?

A
cemented = can see the cement around it
un-cemented = closer to the surrounding bone, no line of cement around/beneath it
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15
Q

risk with un-cemented stem?

A

splintering of the femur as its just wedged in

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16
Q

risk with cemented replacement?

A

have to push cement in with a lot of pressure
if too much pressure - can be pushed into the blood vessels which travel to the lungs and cause a severe inflammatory reaction

17
Q

how long does recovery take in a full hip replacement?

A

3 months until walking unaided

1 year until full mobility and function

18
Q

what determines whether cemented or uncemented hip replacements are used?

A

non-cemented cups better in younger people with cemented stem
mostly down to surgeon choice and experience

19
Q

classical displacement of hip in arthritis?

A

lateral and superior