Lecture 10: Musculoskeletal Injuries Flashcards

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1
Q

What are the S/S of serious MSK/extremity injuries?

A

Suspicious MOI
snap/pop/tear heard or felt by patient
crepitus: pt. movement/palpation
inability to move/use affected part
pain+++
Tenderness
deformity to the limb
bone fragments protruding through skin
moderate to severe swelling
discoloration
loss of sensation
limb that is cold to the touch
severe external bleeding

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2
Q

What are the basic types of MSK injuries?

A

Fracture
luxation/subluxation
sprain
strain

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3
Q

What are the five diagnostic P’s of fractures?

A

Pain- severe pain?
Paralysis- partial/full loss of ability to move?
Paresthesia - loss sensation, tingling?
pallor - has limb lost its color, pale, cyanotic?
pulselessness - absence of distal pulse?

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4
Q

What is the approximal internal blood loss related with different bone fractures?

A

Rib: 125 ml
radius or ulna: 250-500 ml
humerus: 500-750 ml
tibia or fibula: 500-1000 ml
Femur: 1000-2000 ml
pelvis: 1000-massive ml

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5
Q

What is the names of the rules used to determine if the ankle/foot/knee need x-rays?

A

the Ottawa rules

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6
Q

What is the treatment for closed fractures?

A

PMSC pre and post splinting
Apply gentle in-line traction and to splint in “near anatomical” position without pain
pathological angulations: attempt to splint in near anatomic position without resistance
prevent shock, supplemental O2
arrange for appropriate transport as required

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7
Q

What kind of fractures should you splint as found?

A

joint fractures, open fractures of long bones

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8
Q

What is the treatment for open fractures?

A

bandage wound/exposed bone to prevent infection
MSC pre and post splinting
splint in near anatomical position without pain
pathological angulations: attempt to splint in near anatomic position without resistance
prevent shock
arrange for appropriate transport as required

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9
Q

What is the treatment for luxations?

A

digits and recurrent luxation” gentle reduction/splint, PMSC pre & post, refer MD tx//xray (R/O #)

all other joints: splint as found to reduce further risk to neuro/circulation
PMSC pre/ post
refer to MD

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10
Q

What is the treatment for subluxation?

A

PIER
verify MSC, joint integrity
refer to MD prn
X-ray prn to R/O#

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11
Q

What is the eval steps for a sprain and strains?

A

HOPPS (on field)
HOPPSS (off field) (specific palpation added)

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12
Q

What is the tx for sprains and strains?

A

PIER/ PRICE
protect rest ice compression elevation

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13
Q

What is the general treatment for extremity injuries?

A

control bleeding, if present
immobilize injured part
apply ice
elevate if appropriate
no further injury/fractures open after splinting
summon more advanced care as needed
monitor vital signs
minimize or treat for shock
administer supplemental O2 as needed
check+ recheck distal circulation
Keep victim comfortable

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14
Q

What is the difference in observation of posterior hip dislocations vs anterior hip dislocation?

A

posterior: leg in internal rotation, adduction
anterior: external rotation, abduction

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15
Q

What is a clear sign of hip fractures?

A

Shortening of the leg with external rotation

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16
Q

How much should you traction a femoral traction splint?

A

if person conscious: traction to comfort
Unconscious: traction to about 10% of body weight for a max of 15lbs