deck_5366592 Flashcards

1
Q

How should fractures be treated generally?

A

return to anatomic position and immobilize

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2
Q

What are the types of fracture?

A

-closed (simple)-open (compound)-displaced (pulled out of normal alignment)-pathologic-spiral

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3
Q

What is a closed (simple) fracture?

A

fracture in which the bone does not pierce the overlying skin

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4
Q

What is a open (compound) fracture?

A

the bone is exposed to the environment through the wound (infection risk).Procedural washout and antibiotics should be used in treatment of these fractures

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5
Q

Compression fractures?

A

common in the vertebrae due to collapse of the anterior portion of a process (commonly due to osteoporosis)

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6
Q

What is a comminuted fracture?

A

fracture has broken the bone into a number of pieces (high impact, gunshot wounds)

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7
Q

What is an impacted fracture?

A

when bone fragments are driven into each other

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8
Q

What is a spiral fracture?

A

fracture from torque

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9
Q

Something to always consider with a spiral fracture?

A

child abuse because they may indicate child abuse (twisting arm or leg)

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10
Q

What type of spiral fracture in children suggests a LOW suspicion of child abuse?

A

spiral fracture of the distal tibia (toddler’s fracture)- can occur normally

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11
Q

Complete vs. incomplete fracture

A

complete- bone fragments completely separated

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12
Q

What is a stress (hairline) fracture?

A

caused by stress or repeated stress (commonly in weight bearing bones) that may require CT span to ID (x-ray may not pick up).

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13
Q

What is a scaphoid fracture?

A

often secondary to a fall on an outstretched hand

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14
Q

How does a scaphoid fracture present typically?

A

patients will have snuffbox pain but usually an x-ray is unremarkable. Patients still should be splinted or the proximal scaphoid may undergo avascular necrosis

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15
Q

What is a Baslar skull fracture?

A

usually secondary to trauma and may present as:-periorbital ecchymoses (raccoon eyes)-mastoid ecchymoses (Battle sign)-CSF leakage through the ear (otorrhea) or nose (rhinorrhea with salt, metallic taste)

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16
Q

Notes on femoral head fractures?

A

common in elderly and have a high mortality (10-15% die in a year)

17
Q

Types of femoral head fractures?

A

-intracapsular (prone to avascular necrosis)-extracapsulartreatment is variable to patient, usually arthroplasty

18
Q

Series of events following fracture

A

1) hematoma fills fracture gap and surrounding area of injury allowing platelets and inflammatory cells to enter2) end of week 1- tissue is primed for new matrix synthesis3) Weeks 2-3- early callus formation (cannot support weight)4) Around 6 weeks- bony callus mineralized to the point to where controlled weight bearing can be tolerated

19
Q

What is compartment syndrome?

A

occurs when fracture disrupts vascular supply to the extremity. The legs and forearm are the areas most often affected

20
Q

How does compartment syndrome present?

A

patients will experience severe pain and exam will reveal a tense, wedlock compartment

21
Q

Diagnosis of compartment syndrome?

A

measuring the intra-compartmental pressure

22
Q

How is compartment syndrome treated?

A

fasciotomy (release tension via fascia incision)

23
Q

HandP five P’s of compartment syndrome

A

PainPallorPulselessnessParalysisParastesias