Hand and Wrist anatomy Flashcards

1
Q

joints of the wrist

A

radiocarpal

ulno-menisco-triquetral

midcarpal

intercarpal

carpometacarpal

distal radio-ulnar

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2
Q

TFCC

A

triangular fibrocartilage complex

provides intrinsic jt stability

consists of several closel related structures- articular disk, UCL, ECU, meniscus, and radioulnar ligaments

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3
Q

Dorsal compartment of the hand

A
  1. APL and EPB
  2. ECRL and brevis
  3. EPL
  4. Ext digitorum and indicis
  5. Ext digiti minimi
  6. Ext carpi ulnaris
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4
Q

Carpal tunnel

A

10 structures-

8 tendons of FDS and FDP (long and ring finger are superficial)

flexor pollicis longus

median nerve

FCR not considered part of the carpal tunnel

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5
Q

Retinacular ligaments

A

transverse retinacular ligaments attach from the flexor sheath to the lateral bands= stabilization

oblique retinacular ligaments

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6
Q

Swan neck deformity

A

hyperextension of PIP joint w/ flexion of DIP joint

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7
Q

Boutonniere deformity

A

aquired lesion of the extensor mechanism, in which PIP joint develops a flexion deformity and the DIP joint develops an extension deformity

extensor mechanism affected

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8
Q

zones of flexor tendon injury

A

zones to locate injury:

zone 1- distal to insertion of FDS

zone 2- distal palmar crease (no man’s land)

zone 3- distal to the distal edge of the transverse carpal ligament

zone 4- carpal tunnel

zone 5- distal portion of the forearm

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9
Q

Wrist extension mechanics

A

prox and dist row move together relative to the radius according to the convex on concave artrokinematic principle

convex lunate rolls dorsally on the radius and simultaneously slides anteriorly (convex on concave)

46% ext occurs in midcarpal jt, rest in radiocarpal jt

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10
Q

Carpal bones

A

lateral to medial, prox to distal:

scaphoid, lunate, triquetrum, pisiform, trapezium, trapezoid, capitate, hamate

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11
Q

Carpal ligaments

A

most are intracapsular:

intrinsic lig- begin and end on carpal bones

extrinsic lig- connect the radius and ulna to the carpus

volar lig are considered the strongest and most important

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12
Q

Instrinsic ligaments

A

connect adjacent carpals to carpals

larger insertion into cartilage than into bone

less elastic fibers than extrinsic

more prone to avulsion failures

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13
Q

Extrinsic ligaments

A

connect radius and ulna to the carals and carpals to the metacarpals

stiffer but lower yield strength

more prone to rupture

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14
Q

kinematics

A

generally, the distal row is considered a single unit; however the proximal row has a lot of intercarpal movement

the prox and distal row move together relative to the radius according to the convex on concave arthrokinematic principle

36% of flexion occurs in midcarpal joint, remaining in radiocarpal

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15
Q

Biomechanics of the wrist-FLX and EXT

A

primary axis through the capitate

closed packed- full EXT position where ligaments are most taut and position most fractures and dislocations occur

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16
Q

Radial and Ulnar deviation biomechanics

A

radial deviation- dist row moves radially with the hand, whereas the prox row moves ulnarly and flexes

ulnar deviation- prox row moves radially and extends

17
Q

Biomechanics of the wrist- radial/ulnar deviation

A

capitate as axis

UD > RD

in radial deviation, the prox row moves into pronation, flex, and ulnar glide ; distal row moves into supination, ext, and radial glide/

Opposite in ulnar deviation