Common Elbow problems Flashcards

1
Q

Lateral Epicondylitis/epicondylalgia “tennis elbow” characterisitics/incidence

A
  • common occurrence
  • 35-50 years old
  • usually dominant arm in 75% of cases
  • younger cases due to sports
  • older cases related to work or insidious onset
  • tennis players typically have a lot of force going through the elbow with a a long lever arm
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2
Q

Causes of lateral epicondylitis/epicondylalgia

A
  • repetitive wrist motions and cumulative trauma
  • gripping/twisting
  • repetitive flex/ext
  • heavy lifting
  • easily re-aggrevated
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3
Q

Signs and symptoms of lateral epicondylitis/epicondylalgia

A
  • tender to palpation
  • pain and weakness in wrist ext (ECRB/ECRL/Extensor digitorum)
  • decrease grip strength
  • granulation tissue and adhesions
  • varus stress
  • usually painless at rest and PROM
  • reduced wrist extensor flexibility
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4
Q

Differential diagnosis of lateral epicondylitis/epicondylalgia

A
  • C5-C7
  • posterior interosseous nerve entrapment
  • lateral collateral ligament sprain
  • common extensor tendon tear
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5
Q

How to avoid stressing the Lateral epicondylitis/epicondylalgia?

A
  • supinate to pick things up to use wrist flexors and biceps
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6
Q

epicondylitis/epicondylalgia: treatment considerations

A
  • protect healing tissues
  • restore flexibility, strength and endurance
  • manual therapy
  • anti-inflammatory medication
  • grip modification: nirschl = measure trip of ring finger to the palmar crease of hand
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7
Q

How does the elbow counter force strap work for lateral epicondylitis/epicondylalgia

A
  • dissipate force over the tendon
  • minimize stresses on tendon
  • prevents muscle from spreading during contraction therefore preventing force production
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8
Q

Lateral epicondyle tendonosis differences and treatmetns for it

A
  • they will say the more they move it the better it gets “losses up”
  • due to incomplete healing

Treatment:

  • stretching
  • eccentric loading
    monitor carefully
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9
Q

Primary involvement of medial epicondylitis/epicondylalgia

A
  • overruse and microtrauma to wrist flexors
  • pronator teres, flexor carpi radialis, flexor carpi ulnaris
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10
Q

Differential diagnosis for medial epicondylitis/epicondylalgia

A
  • traction neuropraxia ulnar nerve (differential)
  • C7-8
  • medial collateral ligament sprain
  • tendon tear
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11
Q

Treatment for medial epicondylitis/epicondylalgia

A
  • protect healing tissues
  • restore flexibility
  • restore strength and endurance
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12
Q

Modified Nirschl Method surgery

A
  • for 10% who fail conservative methods
  • chronic lateral epicondylitis/epicondylalgia
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13
Q

Indications for the modified Nirschl method surgery

A
  • constant focal unrelenting pain
  • symptoms greater than 1 year
  • 3 or more local steroid injections
  • presence of calcification around lateral elbow
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14
Q

Goal of modified nirschl method

Surgery(not grip modification)

A
  • Alleviate pain
  • degenerative portion of ECRB tendon is excised and then the muscle is reattached
  • outcome 85% return to previous activities without pain
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15
Q

Precautions with modified nirschl method surgery

For rehab/post op

A
  • extension strong contraction
  • prevent wrist flexion with elbow extension (stretching)
  • about 6 weeks

pathologictissue of ECRB is removed

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