Ortho/Rheum Flashcards
Major risk factors for osteoporosis
Advanced age
Postmenopausal
Low body weight
Modifiable risk factors for osteoporosis
Excessive alcohol intake
Sedentary lifestyle
Current smoking
Highest risk factor for fragility fracture
Previous fragility fracture
Interventions to reduce risk of fragility fracture in osteoporotic patients
Weight-bearing exercise
Non-weight-bearing resistance exercise (weight training)
Adequate intake of calcium & Vitamin D
Bisphosphonates
At what level of symptomaticity should a patient be evaluated for surgical intervention of a torn meniscus?
3 - 4 weeks of significant symptoms
If the symptoms don’t last that long, and the patient is asymptomatic on exam, MRI is not your best bet.
Breastfeeding and homemade baby food alone are likely to not provide enough
Vitamin D
Kid will get rickets after several months of deficiency
White male in first or second decade of life
Pain, swelling for weeks - months
Often misdiagnosed as osteomyelitis
Lytic bone lesion “Onion skin” periosteal reaction
Ewing sarcoma
Highly malignant, metastasizes quickly
Surgery, radiation, multi-drug therapy
Papule, pustule, vesicle or nodule
Progresses to expanding ulcer
Purulent base
Ragged violaceous borders
In the context of underlying systemic disorder (IBD, RA, AML)
Pyoderma gangrenosum
Neutrophilic ulcerative skin disease
Diagnose with biopsy
Treat with local or systemic corticosteroids
Ecthyma gangrenosum
Hemorrhagic pustules w/ surrounding erythema
Evolve into necrotic ulcers
Due to pseudomonas
Occurs most commonly in setting of profound neutropenia & pseudomonas bacteremia
Erythema Nodosum
Multiple tender, erythematous nodules/plaques on lower extremities
Associated with medications, infections or autoimmune disease
Does not usually ulcerate
Resolves in 2 - 8 weeks without scarring
Back pain that is worse at night
Malignancy (metastasis)
Solitary, lytic longbone lesion
Langerhans Cell Histiocytosis
Runner
Numbness or pain between 3rd & 4th toes
Clicking sensation when palpating space between them or squeezing metatarsals
Morton neuroma (interdigital neuroma) Not a true neuroma Mechanically induced neuropathic degeneration of interdigital nerves
Causes numbness, aching, burning in distal forefoot
Worsened by walking on hard surfaces
Treatment is metatarsal support w/ a bar or padded shoe inserts to decrease pressure on metatarsal heads
Surgery for those who fail conservative treatment
Management of fibromyalgia
Patient education (benign condition, favorable prognosis)
Regular aerobic exercise
Good sleep hygiene
Antidepressants for those who fail conservative treatment
Poorly localized anterior knee pain
Positive patellofemoral compression test
Patellofemoral Pain Syndrome
Predominantly affects women
Treatment:
Reduced intensity of exercise (especially running)
Activity modification
NSAIDs
Stretching & strengthening exercises (emphasis on quadriceps, knee extensors, hip abductors)