Week 3 - Soft-tissue injuries & patient history taking Flashcards

1
Q

Soft tissue injury signs + symptoms

A
  • Amount of soft tissue fibres damaged
  • Severity of pain, swelling, or bruising
  • Severity of loss of ROM / ligament laxity
  • Amount of LOF
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2
Q

Inflammatory phase:

A

0-72 hours
Initiates the proliferation of new tissue cells, which eventually remodel to restore normal tissue function.
- Swelling occurs (oedema)

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3
Q

Proliferation phase:

A

48 hrs - 6weeks

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4
Q

Remodelling phase:

A

3 weeks - 12 months

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5
Q

Bleeding 0-10 hours post injury:

A
  • Due to damage of small blood vessels +capillaries in the soft tissue
  • Can track distally due to gravity
  • More vascular will bleed more
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6
Q

Main clinical features of the inflammatory phase:

A
  • Pain, swelling, redness
  • +/- increased local temp.
  • LOF
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7
Q

The proliferation phase (what is happening):

A
  • Collagen-forming phase (prod. of type III collagen fibres- form scar tissue)
  • Formation of new blood vessels
  • by 2-3 weeks most scar tissue is laid down.
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8
Q

Oedema:

A

Fluid retention causing affected tissue to become swollen

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9
Q

The remodelling phase (what is happening):

A

Collagen in scar tissue:

  • Matures & becomes denser
  • Becomes more organised along the lines of stress.
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10
Q

Contractile tissue 24 hr behaviour:

A

Usually benefits from rest, usually better in the mornings + worsen w/ activity throughout the day

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11
Q

Inflammatory behaviour 24 hr behaviour:

A

(i. e. OA/RA)

- May be worse in the morning, improve during the day then get worse in the evening.

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12
Q

Degenerating tendinopathies 24 hour behaviour:

A

Usually stiff in the morning & warm up with movement

- Worse the morning after activity

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13
Q

Serious pathology 24 hour behaviour:

A

Pain that wakes you up and keeps you up

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14
Q

Contractile tissue:

A
  • Usually aggravated w/ activity that results in contraction fo that muscle.
  • Improves w/ rest
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15
Q

Non-contractile tissue:

A
  • Usually aggravated w/ activity that loads the joint/ligament
  • Stress tests may be needed
  • May stiffen w/ rest
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16
Q

Red flag examples:

A
  • Age: <20 or >55
  • Violent trauma
  • Constant, progressive, non-mechanical pain
  • Thoracic pain
  • Previous history of cancer
  • Systemic steroid use
  • Drug abuse
  • Unexplained weight loss
  • Structural deformity
  • Widespread neural symptoms
17
Q

Yellow flag examples:

A
  • Fear-avoidance behaviour
  • Catastrophising
  • Belief that pain is uncontrollable
  • Excessive reliance on use of medication
  • Workers compensation issues
  • Depression/anxiety
  • Lack of family support
  • Employer is unsupportive
18
Q

Sprain/subluxation/dislocation/tear

A
  • Injury non-contractile structures
  • Excessive force/load causes the structure to go beyond normal ROM / stretch
  • Common in activities w/ sudden changes of direction
  • Lateral ankle ligament sprain is most common
19
Q

Signs + symptoms of non-contractile injury GRADE 1

A
  • Mild over-stretching of non-contractile structure
  • Mild pain + tenderness @ EOR
  • Normal ROM, function, + feel
20
Q

Signs + symptoms of non-contractile injury GRADE 2

A
  • Moderate fibre disruption
  • Moderate/severe pain, tenderness, bruising, + swelling
  • Limited ROM (secondary to pain/swelling)
  • Increased laxity on stress tests but definite end feel
21
Q

Signs + symptoms of non-contractile injury GRADE 3

A
  • Complete disruption of fibres
  • No end feel, complete laxity
  • Often severe pain, but can also be pain-free as sensory fibres are completely divided in injury
  • Severe limitation in strength/ROM (second to bruising/swelling)
22
Q

Strain/tear/rupture

A
  • Injury to contractile tissue (muscle/tendon)
  • Some/all tissue fibres fail to cope w/ demand
  • Results from forceful contraction/over-stretching
  • May require contraction/loading to reprod. symptoms
  • 2-joint muscles susceptible to tears (HS/quad)
23
Q

Signs + symptoms of a strain/tear/rupture GRADE 1:

A
  • Small # of muscle fibres disrupted
  • Localised pain of mod>high levels of contraction
  • No loss of ROM/strength
24
Q

Signs + symptoms of a strain/tear/rupture GRADE 2:

A
  • Significant # of muscle fibres disrupted w/ associated pain/swelling
  • Mod/severe pain reproduced on light/mod contraction
  • Mod/severe pain reproduced on stretch of struc.
  • Limitation to ROM, strength, + function
25
Q

Signs + symptoms of a strain/tear/rupture GRADE 3:

A
  • Complete disruption of fibres
  • Frequently occurs @ musculotendinous junction
  • May hear an audible pop
  • Immediate pain/LOF
  • Diffuse swelling/haemorrhage
  • Palpable defect
  • Loss of strength