MSK Flashcards
12yo girl, overweight
6m Hx of painful knee w/ limp
Tren
Slipped Upper Femoral Epiphysis
- Displacement of femoral head postero-inferiorly
- Need Tx to prevent avascular necrosis
- Seen in adolescents just before puberty (9-14)
- Bilateral in 20%
- RFs:
- OBESE
- Males
- Metabolic endocrine disease (hypothyroid, hypogonad)
- Sx
- Limp/hip pain ±referred to knee
- Loss of internal rotation of hip
- Ix
- Hip XR in AP + Frog-lateral
- Trethowan sign: line of Klein does not intersect superior femoral epiphyses
- Mx
- Don’t let pt. walk, analgesia + Immediate ortho referral
- Surgical repair - Fixation of growth plate in its slipped position to avoid further slippage
- Complications
- Avascular necrosis
- Arthritis
- Osteochondritis
Short 6yo boy with with insidious onset limp + hip/knee pain + limb shortening
Guarding/spasm when rolling hip internally/externally
Hip XR shows increased density of femoral head
Perthe’s Disease
Avascular necrosis of femoral epiphysis
- Primary school BOYS 4-8yo (SUFE = 10-16yo)
- RFs:
- Boys 5x more common
- Hyperactivity
- Short stature
- Ix
- Hip XR shows increased density of femoral head
- Then becomes “Fragmented/irregular”/”Flattened femoral head”
- Mx
- Analgesia
- Continue activities
- Physio - stretching quads and hamstrings, strengthening quads, encrouage hip abduction
- Educate about exacerbations + Mx
- SURGERY if fail to respond to conservative Mx (MUST BE >6yo)
- Complications
- Premature fusion of growth plates
- Osteoarthritis
10yo with 2m history of swollen joints + morning stiffness, gelling, intermittent limp.
O/E: Salmon coloured rash + Visual impairment. Swan neck deformity.
Juvenile Idiopathic arthritis
- Most common chronic inflammatory joint disease in children
- Persistent joint swelling >6months
- Presents <16yo, in absence of infectio or other defined causes
- 1 in 1000 (as common as epilepsy
- >7 clinical subtypes
- Classification based on:
- No. of joints affected in first 6m
- Rheumatoid factor
- HLA B27
- Classification based on:
- Mx
- Specialist paediatric rheumatology MDT
- PT + OT
- Encourage activity/sports, as inactivity leads to deconditioning/disability/decreased bone mass
- NSAIDs for pain + stiffness
- Corticosteroids - useful adjunctive agents while waiting for effect of second-line agents - avoid if possible due to risk of growth suppression/osteoporosis
-
DMARDs if disease fails to respond
- 1st = oral/SC methotrexate
- 2nd = sulfasalazine
- TNF-a inhibitors
- Complications
- Anterior uveitis
- Joint damage
- Osteoporosis
- Growth failure
4yo with 2 day Hx of painful hip
Able to weight bear on limb, Temp 37.9
Transient Synovitis
- Most common cause of acute hip pain or limp
-
MUST EXCLUDE SEPTIC ARTHRITIS
-
Kocher criteria
- Fever >38.5
- Unable to weight bear
- ESR >40
- WCC >12
- 3, 40, 93, 100% risk (up to 4 points)
-
Kocher criteria
- If <3yo + acute limp, URGENT hospital assessment
- Mx
- Self-limiting
- Bed rest
- Analgesia as needed
- Usually resolves after few days
14yo boy presents with knee pain after football. Relieved by rest.
O/E swelling over tibial tuberosity
Osgood-Schlatter Disease (tibial apophysitis)
- Inflammation of patellar tendon insertion at knee
- Mx
- Reassure this will resolve over time, but may persist until end of growth spurt
- REDUCE or CHANGE sports, gradually increase activity levels as symptoms get better
- Analgesia, Ice packs, Protective knee pads
- Stretching quadriceps
Pain after exercise
Catching/locking/giving way
Osteochondritis dissecans
3yo with 1wk history of fever and knee pain
Swollen, tender, erythematous knee
Raised WCC, ESR
Osteomyelitis
- Infection of metaphysis of long bones - usually distal femur & proximal tibia
- Haematogenous spread (e.g. surgery, open wound)
- Staph aureus
- <5yo
Ix
- Septic screen
- Blood cultures
- Joint aspiration + MC&S
- XR or MRI of joint
- XR normal until late disease
Mx
- ACUTE
- Blood culture first THEN high-dose IV empirical Abx
- Change regimen once MC&S results arrive
- Switch to oral once clinical recovery
- Immobilise affected limb
- Surgical debridement if there is dead bone/biofilm
- CHRONIC
- Staging using Cierny-Mader classification
- Surgical debridement
- IV Abx
1yo with 1 day history of fever and swollen thigh. Warm, tender, erythematous.
O/E: Temp 38.9, Reduced range of movement, infant holds limb still. There is marked tenderness over head of femur.
Septic arthritis
- Infection of SYNOVIAL joint (osteomyelitis = bone)
- Hip = 75% of cases
- Commonly <2yo INFANTS - acutely unwell febrile child
- Temp >38.5
- Unable to weight bear
- ESR >40
- WCC >12
- Haematogenous spread
Ix
- Septic screen
- Blood cultures
- Joint aspirate + MC&S
- XR of knee
- MRI of knee
Mx
-
IV Abx 2wks - then oral 4wks
- Suspected Gram +ve = Vancomycin
- Suspected Gram -ve = Ceftriaxone
- Joint aspiration to dryness PRN
- Joint washout + surgery may be needed
9yo with 2wk history of swollen knee. Hx of GI infection a month ago.
O/E: Temp. 38.2, knee is swollen. Movement not affected. Normal bloods and XR.
Reactive Arthritis
Most common arthritis of childhood.
- Transient joint swelling <6wks duration (ankle/knee)
-
Preceding infection
- Enteric bacteria - salmonella, shigella, campylobacter, yersinia
- Viral infection
- STIs
- mycoplasma, borrelia burgdoferi/Lyme disease
- Low-grade fever <38.5
Mx = Self-resolving. NSAIDs for analgesia.