Orthopaedics Flashcards

1
Q

Patient has pain on medial side of 5th toe and lateral side of 4th toe, what growth might be causing it?

A

Interdigital neuroma- Morton’s metatarsalgia

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2
Q

Causes of pain in the heel?

A

Bony: diseases of calcaneum, arthritis of subtalar joint
Tendon: rupture of calcaneal tendon, calcaneal paratendinitis, plantar fasciitis
Soft tissue: tender heel fat pad, postcalcaneal bursitis,

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3
Q

What type of imaging is most specific for osteomyelitis?

A

MRI

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4
Q

In emergency treatment of an open fracture what order do you reduce it, stop bleeding or clean the wound?

A

ATLS
Stop bleeding (tourniquets, chemicals, pressure)
Clean wound
Reduce and retain

Tetanus, antibiotics, imaging

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5
Q

How are open fractures classified in Gustilo Anderson classification?

A

1- clean, 1cm skin wound, simple fracture
2- no flaps or avulsions, skin wound >1cm, simple fracture
3- high energy injury or multifragmented fracture or vascular injury needing repair, severe farmyard contamination

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6
Q

How many compartments are there in the leg?

A

Anterior, lateral, superficial posterior and deep posterior

Potential regions of compartment syndrome

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7
Q

Which parts of the body are most at risk of compartment syndrome?

A

Forearm and leg (calf)

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8
Q

If you have a septic joint, what are the three ways bacteria may seed to the joint?

A

Haematogeous- bacteraemia
Direct inoculation
Contiguous spread from osteomyelitis

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9
Q

Why is septic arthritis an emergency?

A

Irreversible cartilage destruction by release of proteolytic enzymes, the cartilage replacing the damaged cartilage is of an inferior quality.

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10
Q

How will the patient be holding their leg if they have a septic arthritis?

A

In flexion, as this maximises the volume of pus the capsule can contain

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11
Q

Which blood test is most useful for determining efficacy of treatment with a septic arthritis?

A

CRP, should increase within hours of infection, normalising within 1 week of treatment

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12
Q

When does the cauda equina start?

A

L2 to the coccygeal nerve

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13
Q

Differential causes of cauda equina syndrome?

A

Lumbar disc herniation (commonest)

Spinal stenosis
Tumours
Trauma (dislocation or collapse)
Epidural hematoma
Epidural abscess
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14
Q

Patient has had a bike accident, they have pain out of proportion to the clinical expectation in their forearm, they get pain on passive stretching. What is the possible cause?

A

Compartment Syndrome

Signs of ischaemia:
Pain, paralysis
Pallor, pulselessness, paraesthesia (late)

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15
Q

After how many hours of ischaemia can a muscle become irreversibly damaged?

A

6 hours

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16
Q

If a patient has a crush element to their fracture, what complication is more likely than a simple fracture?

A

Compartment syndrome

17
Q

How can you investigate compartment syndromes in the unconscious or children if unsure?

A

Check intramuscular pressures within the compartment

If suspected clinically- surgery