Musculoskeletal Development Flashcards

1
Q

What is talipes?

A

Clubfoot - abnormality of the ankle and foot present at birth (bilateral in 50%)

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2
Q

What is this a presentation of?
A fixed abnormality in the foot and ankle that restricts active and passive movement at the ankle. Inversion, adduction of forefoot relevant to hindfoot, plantarflexion.

A

Talipes equinovarus (fixed)

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3
Q

What is this a presentation of?
Abnormality in the foot and ankle that restricts active movement at the ankle, passive movement is preserved. Inversion, adduction of forefoot relevant to hindfoot, plantarflexion.

A

Positional talipes

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4
Q

What are the causes of talipes?

A
  1. Majority isolated and asymptomatic

2. 20% associated with genetic syndromes

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5
Q

What is the management for talipes?

A
  1. Ponseti’s method - foot manipulated and placed in serial plaster casts, correction is gradual
  2. If failed - surgery to Achilles tendon, ligaments and bone.
  3. If positional talipes - regular stretching and self-correcting.
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6
Q

What is this describing?

Abnormal development of the hip joint in utero, unilateral in 80%, more common in left hip.

A

Congenital hip dysplasia

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7
Q

What is the spectrum of congenital hip dysplasia from and to?

A

From stable acetabular dysplasia to established hip dislocation.

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8
Q

What are the risk factors for congenital hip dysplasia?

A
  1. History in 1st degree relative
  2. Breech presentation
  3. Multiple pregnancy
  4. Female (80%)
  5. First born
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9
Q

How is congenital hip dysplasia diagnosed from birth to 3 months old?

A
  1. Positive finding in Ortolani’s and Barlow’s manoeuvres at screening - feel click/clunk.
  2. Asymmetrical skin creases at upper thigh.
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10
Q

How is congenital hip dysplasia diagnosed from 3 months to 1 year old?

A
  1. Limited leg adduction
  2. Leg length discrepancy (Galeazzi test)
  3. Asymmetry of leg creases
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11
Q

How is congenital hip dysplasia diagnosed in a mobile child?

A
  1. Limp

2. If bilateral - excessive lumbar lordosis and waddling gait

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12
Q

What is Ortolani’s manoeuvre?

A

Attempt to relocate a partially dislocated hip.

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13
Q

What is Barlow’s manoeuvre?

A

Aims to sublux or dislocate an unstable hip.

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14
Q

What is Galeazzi’s manoeuvre?

A
  1. Child lies supine, hips and knees flexed, feet flat on table, ankles touching buttocks.
  2. Test is +ve if knees at different heights.
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15
Q

How should you investigate suspected congenital hip dysplasia?

A
  1. In newborn period - USS hip

2. >6 months - hip X-ray

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16
Q

What is the management for congenital hip dysplasia?

A
  1. Mild dysplasia - delay by 2-8 weeks for spontaneous resolution.
  2. Pavlik harness - prevents hip extension and adduction while allowing flexion and abduction.
  3. Surgery if harness does not help/condition presents >6 months old.