Ortho/Rheum Flashcards

1
Q

Major risk factors for osteoporosis

A

Advanced age
Postmenopausal
Low body weight

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2
Q

Modifiable risk factors for osteoporosis

A

Excessive alcohol intake
Sedentary lifestyle
Current smoking

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3
Q

Highest risk factor for fragility fracture

A

Previous fragility fracture

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4
Q

Interventions to reduce risk of fragility fracture in osteoporotic patients

A

Weight-bearing exercise
Non-weight-bearing resistance exercise (weight training)
Adequate intake of calcium & Vitamin D
Bisphosphonates

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5
Q

At what level of symptomaticity should a patient be evaluated for surgical intervention of a torn meniscus?

A

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.

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6
Q

Breastfeeding and homemade baby food alone are likely to not provide enough

A

Vitamin D

Kid will get rickets after several months of deficiency

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7
Q

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

A

Ewing sarcoma

Highly malignant, metastasizes quickly

Surgery, radiation, multi-drug therapy

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8
Q

Papule, pustule, vesicle or nodule
Progresses to expanding ulcer
Purulent base
Ragged violaceous borders

In the context of underlying systemic disorder (IBD, RA, AML)

A

Pyoderma gangrenosum

Neutrophilic ulcerative skin disease

Diagnose with biopsy
Treat with local or systemic corticosteroids

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9
Q

Ecthyma gangrenosum

A

Hemorrhagic pustules w/ surrounding erythema
Evolve into necrotic ulcers

Due to pseudomonas

Occurs most commonly in setting of profound neutropenia & pseudomonas bacteremia

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10
Q

Erythema Nodosum

A

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

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11
Q

Back pain that is worse at night

A

Malignancy (metastasis)

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12
Q

Solitary, lytic longbone lesion

A

Langerhans Cell Histiocytosis

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13
Q

Runner
Numbness or pain between 3rd & 4th toes
Clicking sensation when palpating space between them or squeezing metatarsals

A
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

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14
Q

Management of fibromyalgia

A

Patient education (benign condition, favorable prognosis)
Regular aerobic exercise
Good sleep hygiene
Antidepressants for those who fail conservative treatment

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15
Q

Poorly localized anterior knee pain

Positive patellofemoral compression test

A

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)

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