Shoulder and Elbow Problems Flashcards

1
Q

What are the most common shoulder and elbow problems for each age group? (teens & 20s/30s and 40s/50s and 60s/70+)

A
  • Teens/20s
    • Fractures and instability
  • 30s and 40s
    • Rotary cuff and capsulitis
  • 50s and 60s
    • Impingement and AC joint
  • 70s and +
    • Degenerative rotary cuff and joint
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2
Q

What are upper limb fractures usually due to in younger and older patients?

A

Younger - high velocity injuries

Older - osteoporotic injuries

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3
Q

What is the most mobile joint in the body, and what does this sacrifice?

A

Shoulder, sacrificing stability

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4
Q

What are the 3 directions of shoulder dislocation?

A
  • Anterior 90%
  • Posterior 9%
  • Inferior 1%
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5
Q

What direction of shoulder dislocation is most common?

A

Anterior (90%)

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6
Q

What is the treatment for shoulder dislocation?

A
  • Manipulation
  • Immobilisation
  • Physiotherapy
  • Surgery
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7
Q

What is the presentation of subacromial impingement?

A

Often pain when abduct arm, due to degeneration in acromial joint

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8
Q

What is impingement?

A

Pain and dysfunction due to pathology which decreases volume of subacromial space of increases the size of contents

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9
Q

What is the treatment for subacromial impingement?

A
  • Subacromial steroid injection
  • Physiotherapy
  • Arthroscopic subacromial decompression
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10
Q

What is frozen shoulder also known as?

A

Known as adhesive capsulitis:

  • Primary (idiopathic) or secondary
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11
Q

What are the clinical features of frozen shoulder?

A

All movements painful or restricted (stiff)

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12
Q

How is frozen shoulder diagnosed?

A

Is a clinical diagnosis with normal radiograph

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13
Q

What is the treatment for frozen shoulder?

A
  • Early presentation
    • Hydrodilatation
  • Late presentation
    • Surgery
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14
Q

How is rotary cuff tear diagnosed?

A

Diagnosis is clinical, using tests can tell which part is damaged

Confirmatory tests are US or MRI scan

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15
Q

What is the treatment for rotary cuff tear?

A

Treatment:

  • If acute then early surgery
  • If chronic and degenerative then surgery is symptomatic
  • Depends on size, time and age

Superior capsular reconstruction is an option for massive, irreparable rotator cuff tears:

  • Cadaveric skin graft is used to reconstruct capsule, not a tendon
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16
Q

What is the cause of rotary cuff tear in younger and older patients?

A

Younger - traumatic

Older - degenerative

17
Q

What are the different kinds of shoulder arthritis?

A
  • Osteoarthritis
  • Inflammatory arthritis
  • Post-traumatic arthritis
18
Q

What is the treatment of shoulder arthritis?

A
  • Joint replacement
  • Reverse shoulder prosthesis (concave and convex reversed) often used when rotator cuff muscles damaged as better bio-mechanics
19
Q

What are the most common elbow pathologies for each age group (young/middle aged/elderly)?

A
  • Young
    • Fractures and dislocation
  • Middle age
    • Tendinopathies
  • Elderly
    • Degenerative disease
  • Cubital tunnel syndrome at any age
20
Q

What is epicondylitis?

A

A painful inflammation of tendons surrounding an epicondyle

21
Q

What are the 2 kinds of epicondylitis?

A
  • Golfers elbow is medial side of joint
    • Affects flexors
  • Tennis elbow is lateral side of joint
    • Affects extensors
22
Q

Golfer’s elbow effects what group of muscles?

A

Flexors

23
Q

Tennis elbow affects what group of muscles?

A

Extensors