Musculoskeletal Flashcards

1
Q

Most ROM/mobility issues lead patients to what type of treatment?

A

PT

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2
Q

Adduction vs. Abduction

A

movement of the arms and legs back towards the body vs. away from the body

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3
Q

Flexion vs. Extension

A

a movement that decreases the angle between two body parts vs. a movement that increases the angle between two body parts

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4
Q

What parts of the body can extend and flex?

A

Shoulders (bring arm up is flexion and bringing arm back is extension)
Elbow (crunch motion is flexion and bringing arm back is extension)
Knee (butt kickers is flexion and back to normal is extension)
Neck (chin to chest is flexion, chin to sky is extension)
Spine (bend forward is flexion, bend backwards is extension)

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5
Q

Eversion vs. Inversion

A

eversion is the movement of the sole away from the medial plane vs. inversion is the movement of the sole towards the medial plane

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6
Q

Pronation vs. Supination

A

Pronation is when the dorsal aspect is facing up vs. the dorsal aspect facing down
OR
for the feet; supinated leans outward while pronated leans inward

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7
Q

Pronation and supination refer to which two body parts?

A

hands and feet

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8
Q

Internal vs. external rotation

A

internal rotation is towards the center of the body vs. away from the center of the body

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9
Q

What part of the body typically undergoes internal and external rotation? What does it look like?

A

Hips
With patient laying supine, have them flex knee to table top position; bringing the foot out laterally is internal rotation while bringing the foot inwards is external rotation (think about the hip sitting in the ball and socket)

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10
Q

Do nurses adjust contractures?

A

No

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11
Q

TMJ

A

articulation of mandible and temporal bones

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12
Q

Scoliosis

A

S-curvature of the thoracic spine

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13
Q

Kyphosis

A

Exaggerated curvature of the cervical spine; hunchback

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14
Q

Lordosis

A

Curving inward of the lower back

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15
Q

What health history questions are necessary to ask regarding joint and muscle issues?

A
warmth
cramps
redness
pain
stiffness
swelling
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16
Q

Claudication pain

A

deep muscle pain usually in the calf but can be in the lower leg or top of the foot

17
Q

Claudication pain character

A

feels like a cramp, numbness/tingling, or a cold feeling

18
Q

What triggers claudication pain?

A

activity (walking or stairs) with claudication distance (how long it takes for pain to start) or elevation (“rest pain”)

19
Q

What relieves claudication pain?

A

rest - usually within a minute or two

dangling - for when “rest pain” is present

20
Q

Claudication pain associated symptoms?

A

cool, pale skin below the ankle

21
Q

When inspecting the TMJ, what are we looking/palpating for?

A

swelling, clicking, symmetry

22
Q

How do we assess for scoliosis?

A

have patient bend forward and the shoulders will be uneven if they have scoliosis

23
Q

What is important to know before doing ROM exercises, especially in the knees and hips?

A

patient history of injury or surgery

24
Q

Patients who have had hip surgery cannot do what ROM movement?

A

adduction

25
Q

Active vs. passive movement

A

active is when the patient does the movement themselves and passive is when the nurse does it for the patient

26
Q

Osteoporosis

A

occurs when the bones become porous, weak and brittle

27
Q

Osteoporosis is more common in who?

A

women > men

white, post-menopausal women

28
Q

RA

A

chronic, inflammatory, autoimmune response that causes inflammation of synovial fluid, hyperplasia, and swelling which leads to bilateral joint pain, stiffness and swelling that is worse in the morning

29
Q

RA is more common in who?

A

2.5 times more common in women than men

30
Q

Is osteoporosis genetic?

A

Yes

31
Q

Osteoarthritis

A

degenerative joint disease that is non-inflammatory and destroys the cartilage between bones and creates osteophytes

32
Q

Osteoarthritis is more common in who?

A

older adults
females
Caucasians
obese individuals