20 - Hand and Wrist Conditions Flashcards
What bone in the hand is the most likely to fracture and what is the common mechanism of injury?
- Scaphoid (10% hand fractures and 80% carpal fractures)
- FOOSH (hyperextension and impaction of bone on radius or axial end on compression)
- Mainly young adults and adolescents
What are the clinical features of a scaphoid fractures?
- Pain in anatomical snuffbox and exacerbated by moving the wrist
- Passive range of motion reduced but not dramatically
- Swelling around the radial and posterior wrist
- Fractures mainly at the waist, sometimes proximal or distal (scaphoid tubercle)
How should you investigate a scaphoid fracture?
- Plain X-ray may not the fracture initially
- Follow up x-ray 10-14 days later and the fracture line may be visible due to bone resorption. In the meantime if fracture suspected treat as fracture
- After 10-14 days if still not clear but still symptomatic can use MRI or CT
What is the complication of a scaphoid fracture?
- Retrograde blood supply and weak supply to proximal scaphoid
- Displaced fractures: risk of non-union, malunion, avascular necrosis, secondary OA, carpal instability
- OA more common if non-union, malunion and AVN
What is a Colles’ fracture and what will it present like?
- Extraarticular fracture of the distal radial metaphysis with dorsal angulation and impaction
- Ulnar styloid fracture in 50% cases
- Can be viewed on lateral x-ray and patient will have painful deformed swollen wrist
What is the difference between a Colle’s and Smith’s fracture?
What is the mechanism of injury of a Colle’s fracture and who is affected the most?
- FOOSH with pronated forarem and wrist in dorsiflextion
- Patients with osteoporosis so post menopausal women
- Often in high impact trauma like skiing
- Dorsally angulated and impacted
How is a Colle’s fracture treated and what are the complications?
- Reduction and immobilisation in cast
- Malunion leading to dinner fork deformity
- Median nerve palsy and post traumatic carpal tunnel syndrome
- Secondary OA (more common when intra-articular)
- Tear of EPL due to tendon over sharp bone fragment
What is a Smith fracture?
Fracture of distal radius with volar angulation of distal fracture fragment(s). Mainly extra articular
What is the mechanism of a Smith’s fracture and what are the complications?
- Young males and elderly females
- Fall onto flexed wrist or direct blow to back of wrist
- Garden spade deformity which is cosmetically unattractive and can distort carpal tunnel so carpal tunnel syndrome
What is a quick overview of rheumatoid arthritis?
Autoimmune disease where autoantibodies, rheumatoid factor, attack synovial membrane. The inflammed synovial cells proliferate to form a pannus which penetrates cartilage and bone leading to erosion and deformity. Mainly affects MCPJ and PIPJ of hands and feet and cervical spine
What might a patient with Rheumatoid arthritis present with and why is it difficult to diagnose?
- Picture is initial presentation
- Late presentation: nodules, x-ray feautures, hand deformities
- Hard to diagnose as it is bilateral swelling so no normal to compare it to
What are the x-ray features of rheumatoid arthritis?
What are the deformities of the finger joints in rheumatoid arthritis?
- Swan Neck
- Boutonneire
What is swan neck deformity due to?
- PIPJ hyperextended, DIPJ and MCPJ flexed
- Tissues on palmar aspet of PIPJ become lax due to adjacent synovitis so imbalance of muscle forces (extension > flexion) so joint with lax tissues is hyperextended
- DIPJ there is elongation or rupture of ED on base of proximal phalanx so mallet deformity