Musculoskeletal (Spine) Flashcards

1
Q

What are you looking for on inspection of the spine?

A

Expose patient suitably - underwear and bra
Inspect from all sides
Skin - cafe-au-lait (+/- neurofibromatosis), sacral dimple, scars
Cervical - deformity, scars, asymmetry
Lumbar - kyphosis, scoliosis

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2
Q

What are you looking for on palpation of the spine?

A

Vertebrae and paraspinal muscles for tenderness
Cervical spine and neck posteriorly in the midline, laterally and anteriorly (incl brief thyroid exam)
Supraclavicular fossa - masses ie LNs, tumours
Thoracolumbar and sacrum - spinous processes and muscles; palpable step at the lumbosacral junction may indicate spondylolisthesis (slipped vertebra)
Sacroiliac joint - tenderness in AS

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3
Q

How do you assess range of movement of the cervical spine?

A

Active - flexion (chin to sternum), extension; lateral flexion (normal = 45 degrees), lateral rotation (80 degrees) - prior two restricted in cervical spondylosis
Passive - perform same movements passively and cautiously if restrictions found whilst feeling for creptius

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4
Q

How do you assess the range of movement of the thoracic and lumbar spine?

A

Flexion - assessed by recording the distance of a patients fingers from the ground when bent over (<7cm) or lowest level person can reach ie mid-tibia
Extension - ask patient to arch back, normal range is 25 degrees thoracic/35 degrees lumbar - limited in disc prolapse/fracture
Lateral flexion - with patient standing and legs 30cm apart, measure the distance between fingertips and floor then get them to maximally flex sideways and remeasure; normal >10cm difference between measurements
Rotation - seat patient with arms folded across chest; ask to twist - 40 degrees is normal

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5
Q

What is a modified Schober’s test?

A

Used as a quantitative measure of flexion of lumbar spine
Mark 15 cm of lumbar spine measuring 10cm above and 5cm below PSIS with patient standing
Get patient to flex maximally and re-measure the distance between the marks - normal flexion with be an increase between the marks of at least 5cm

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6
Q

What else do you have to assess?

A

With patient slightly bent forward, lightly percuss the spine from neck root to sacrum
Tenderness indicates infection/fracture/neoplasia etc
Gait assessment

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7
Q

What special tests should be performed if vertebral disc prolapse suspected?

A

Straight leg raise - patient flat on couch, passive flexion of hip with extended leg - back or leg pain = positive finding; parasthesiae or pain in nerve root distribution suggests nerve root irritation - can also lower leg until pain disappears then dorsiflex the foot - if signs increase again = Lasegue’s sign
Bowstring test - straight leg raise, if pain felt, flex knee slightly and apply pressure in popliteal fossa stretching tibial nerve - radiating pain + parasthesiae suggests nerve root irritation
Femoral stretch test - prone and anterior thigh fixed to couch, flex each knee in turn
- skin irritation over anterior compartment by irritating L2-4

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8
Q

What special tests should be performed if ankylosing spondylitis is suspected?

A

Assess chest expansion at the level of the 4th intercostal space (3-5cm = normal, reduction is positive)

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9
Q

How do you complete the examination?

A

Neurovascular assessment of upper and lower limbs
Lower back pain - abdo exam for masses, PR exam for cauda equina, hip exam for OA
Neck pain - shoulder examination

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