Upper Extremity Flashcards

0
Q

Where do distal humerus ORIF typically fail?

A

Supercondylar level

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1
Q

What flap is used to cover deficits over posterior elbow?

A

Reverse radial forearm flap

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2
Q

How should posterior incision cross elbow? (Midline, medial or lateral)

A

Medial to olecrenon, because lateral skin flap is more vascular

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3
Q

Three approaches for intra articular distal humerus fracture?

A

Bryan-Murray
triceps split
olecrenon osteotomy

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4
Q

Which posterior approach allows for the most intra articular visualization?

A

Olecrenon osteotomy (>50%)

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5
Q

When would you not want to do olecrenon osteotomy? (What patient population)

A

Patient who may need a TEA (relative contraindications)

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6
Q

When doing Olecrenon osteotomy, what are operative considerations?

A

Consider pre-drilling (put plate on, drill holes, take plate off)
Landmark bare area
Chevron cut
Rough finish (don’t cut all the way through with saw)
Medial and lateral windows using paratricipital approach
Identify and protect collateral ligaments
Cut almost all the way through before breaking roughly to facilitate interdigitation

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7
Q

What is bare area?

A

Area deficient of cartilage at intraarticular base of coronoid, landmark for olecrenon osteotomy

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8
Q

When fixing olecrenon with tension band wires, what is ideal shape/position of wires in relation to fracture?

A

Should cross at fracture (or osteotomy site), distance from k wires to fracture should be the same as distance from fracture to exit holes.

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9
Q

The triceps has three heads but only two insertions, which heads coalesce distally?

A

Medial and lateral

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10
Q

Name some principals of parallel plating for distal humerus fractures, with respect to screws.

A

As many screws as possible
Try and get a screw from both plates through every fragment
Interdigitate screws
Compress sequentially alternating medial and lateral
Every screw should go through plate

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11
Q

2004 study by Kamineni et al., DHF with TEA replacement, what was the issue with the TEA?

A

Better over first 2 years, but TEA has increased issues after 2 years including periprosthetic fractures and need for revisions.

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12
Q

McKee et al 2008, study of TEA vs ORIF for DHF, what was main finding?

A

TEA in patients over 65 have better DASH for 2 years.

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13
Q

What is SLAC?

A

Scapholunate advanced collapse

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14
Q

What is SNAC?

A

scaphoid nonunion advanced collapse

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15
Q

With radial deviation the scaphoid —— .

A

Flexes

16
Q

With ulnar deviation the scaphoid ——.

A

Extends

17
Q

Contribution to wrist rom.

  • —- occurs at radio carpal joint.
  • —– occurs at mid carpal joint.
A

60%

40%

18
Q

Madelungs deformity is of what bone?

A

Distal radius

19
Q

Someone had a proximal row carpectomy ten years ago, comes in with slowly worsening wrist pain, what is diagnosis?

A

Arthritis between lunate surface of capitate and distal radius

20
Q

Signs of DRUJ injury on X-ray?

A

Ulnar styloid fracture
Widened DRUJ
Subluxed ulna on lateral
>5 mm shortening of radius