treating musculoskeletal conditions Flashcards
What is osteogenic cell?
Bone stem cell
What is osteoblast?
Bone forming cell, secretes osteoid, catalyses mineralisation of osteoid
What is osteocyte?
Mature bone cell formed when osteoid becomes embedded in its secretions (osteoid).
Sense mechanical strain to direct osteoblast/clast activity
What are osteoclasts?
Bone breaking cells, dissolve & resorb bone by phagocytosis, derived from bone marrow
How is compact bone organised?
Has osteons - repeated structural units with concentric lamellae around a central haversian canal (contains blood vessels, nerves & lymphatics). Has lacunae (small spaces containing osteocytes tiny canaliculi radiate from lacunae filled with ECM). Has volkman's canals (transverse perforating canals). Provides protection, support & resists stresses of weight
What is the structure of long bones?
- periosteum (connective tissue covering outside of bone),
- compact bone (hard outer shell of bone), cancellous bone (inner porous less dense part of bone).
- Has medullary cavity containing yellow bone marrow.
- Nutrient artery.
- Articular cartilage on surface of bone at joint.
- Top part of bone is epiphysis, physis underneath (growth plate), metaphysis below, diaphysis.
What are pathological fractures?
Normal stresses on abnormal bone (local or general) eg. Osteoporosis (loss of bone density), malignancy (primary, bone mets), vitamin D deficiency (osteomalacia, rickets), osteomyelitis, osteogenesis imperfects, pagets
What are stress fractures?
Abnormal stresses on normal bone
What investigations are used for fractures?
X-ray, MRI (soft tissue + bone), CT scan, bone scans (widespread disease - cancer/infection)
What are some general fracture complications?
Fat embolus (within hours), DVT (days/weeks), PE, infection/sepsis (especially if come through skin or have metal inside), prolonged immobility (UTI, chest infection, sores)
What are some urgent local complications of fractures?
Local visceral injury, vascular injury, nerve injury, compartment syndrome (pressure within compartment increases restricting blood flow to area), haemarthrosis, infection, gas gangrene
What are some less urgent local complications of fractures?
Fracture blisters, plaster sores, pressure sores, nerve entrapment, myositis ossificans, ligament injury, tendon lesions, joint stiffness, algodystrophy
What are late local complications of fractures?
Delayed union (heals late), malunion (heals in wrong position), non-union (doesn’t heal at all), avascular necrosis, muscle contracture, joint instability, osteoarthritis
What types of joints do we have ?
- fibrous (sutures, syndesmosis, interosseous membrane),
- cartilaginous (synchrondoses eg spine, symphyses eg. Pubic),
- synovial (plane, hinge, condyloid, ball & socket, pivot, saddle)
How are synovial joints stabilised?
Ligaments, muscles/tendons, bone surface congruity