10 - Knee and Foot Disorders Flashcards Preview

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Flashcards in 10 - Knee and Foot Disorders Deck (35)
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1
Q

What are the signs of compartment syndrome and what are the long and short term consequences if not treated?

A

Signs: severe pain in limb which is excessive for degree of damage, increasing and not relieved by analgesia. Pain exacerbated by passive stretch of muscles

Short: Ischaemia due to reduced perfusion of muscles so rhabdomyolysis and acute kidney injury. Neurovascular signs later. Loss of peripheral pulses so nerves get ischemic leading to distal paraesthesia followed by loss of motor function

Long: Chronic kidney injury from rhabdomyolysis. Volkmann’s ischaemic contracture from necrosis fibrosis

2
Q

What are the common causes of ankle fractures and what do you need to take into account upon assessment?

A
  • Eversion/Inversion injury
  • Consider co-morbidities and if diabetic
  • Look for blisters as surgery has to be halted until clear and may turn necrotic increasing healing time
  • If open need urgent surgery and irrigation to prevent osteomyelitis
3
Q

What is the ring of the ankle joint and how does it help to assess ankle fracture?

A

- Proximal: articular surface of tibia and fibula joint by syndesmotic ligaments

- Medial: medial deltoid ligament

- Inferior: subtalar jont

- Lateral: lateral ligament complex (anterior and posterior talofibular and talocalcaneal

Likely that with a fracture there is a ligament tear so can figure if stable or not

4
Q

What is talar shift?

A
  • When there is a disruption of any two of the syndesmosis, medial or lateral ligaments. Leads to unstable ankle mortise and wiens talus
  • Syndesmosis are ligaments holding the tibia and fibula together
5
Q

How do you treat an ankle fracture?

A

- Stable: Aircast boot or fibreglass cast for comfort

- Unstable: surgical stabilisation, high risk in patients with diabetes

6
Q

What is an ankle sprain, how does it heal and what is the common mechanism of injury?

A
  • Partial or complete tear of one or more of the ligaments of the ankle joint
  • Rest and time but if don’t heal can cause ankle instability
  • Excessive strain of ligaments past it’s yield point. Often inversion injury of plantar flexed weight bearing foot. Anterior talofibular at risk
7
Q

What are the lateral and medial ligaments of the foot?

A
8
Q

What are risk factors for ankle sprains?

A
  • Weak ankle muscles crossing joint
  • Weak or lax ligaments due to hereditary or overstretching
  • Inadequate joint proprioception
  • Slow neuromuscular response to off-balance positon
  • Running on uneven surfaces
  • Wearing high heels or shoes with inadequate ankle support
9
Q

Why does a severe ankle sprain leads to avulsion fracture of fifth metatarsal tuberosity and when do you need to be careful when diagnosing this kind of fracture?

A

- Peroneus brevis tendon attached to tubercle and under tension in inversion injury

  • In children unfused apophysis can be seen and look llike fracture, both can exist!!
10
Q

What is the mechanism of injury of achilles tendon rupture?

A
  • Men 30-50 years mainly weekend warriors
  • Forceful push off with extended knee, e.g when jumping
  • Fall with foot outstretch and ankle dorsiflexed
  • Falling from a height

Rupture in vascular watershed area, 6cm above insertion, as decreased thickness and vascularity here

11
Q

What are the symptoms of an Achille’s tendon rupture?

A

Inability to stand on tip toe or push off whilst walking

12
Q

How do you diagnose and treat and achille’s tendon rupture?

A
  • Thompson’s test, MRI and ultrasound
  • Two ends frayed so surgical reconstruction hard
  • Conservatively with aircast boot.
  • Rerupture rate and issues with overlying skin as thin and poorly vascularised
13
Q

What is hallux valgus?

A
  • Big toe lateral deviation
  • Varus deviation of first metatarsal
  • Valgus deviation and lateral rotation of hallux
  • Prominence of metatarsal head with or without overlying callus
14
Q

What is hallux valgus caused by and what are some issues?

A

Issues: middle aged females cosmetic issue, painful movement of 1st MTPJ

Causes: secondary to trauma, arthritis, ligament laxity (which can be inherited), tight shoes exacerbate and line of pull of EHL tendon can exacerbate

DON’T KNOW REAL REASON

15
Q

What is hallux rigidus and some signs of it?

A

- OA of 1st MTPJ resulting in stiffness

  • Can be due to stress of walking, gout or previous septic arthritis
  • Pain in 1st MTPJ on walking and dorsiflexion. Walking on outside of foot, restricted dorsiflexion of toe, dorsal bunion (osteophyte)
16
Q

What do the following terms mean

  • Arthroplasty?
  • Arthodesis?
  • Excision arthroplasty?
  • Osteotomy?
A
  • Joint replacement
  • Joint fusion
  • Surgical removement of joint with replacement of soft tissue, e.g rolled up tendon
  • Surgical cutting of bone to realign
17
Q

How can you treat OA of hallux? (hallux rigidus)

A
  • Activity modificatiom, analgesia, aids
  • Orthotics preventing 1st MTPJ movement
  • If conservative doesnt work, arthrodesis of 1st MTPJ or maybe arthroplasty
18
Q

What is the difference between OA of ankle joint and OA of hip joint?

A

- Ankle nearly always secondary arthritis

  • Post traumatic arthritis few years later, inflammation, joint stress, obesisty
  • Few that are primary arent as bad as secondary OA and tend to be older
19
Q

What is the treatment for OA of the ankle?

A

- Arthrodesis as patients can still walk due to mid and fore foot with no bad limp

  • Ankle arthroplasty may be considered but risk of infection and loosening
20
Q

What are some common deformities of the lesser toes?

A
21
Q

What is a claw toe?

A

- Toes hyperextended at MTPJ and flexed at PIP

  • Usually all four litte toes and may get corns
  • Usually due to neurological damage, e.g cerebral palsy, stroke, diabetes or alcohol dependence.
  • Due to muscle imbalance so tendons and ligaments weirdly tight
22
Q

What is a hammer toe?

A
  • Flexed at PIPJ, most commonly second toe
  • Ill-fitting pointed shoes causing muscles to contract and shorten
23
Q

What is a mallet toe?

A

Flexed at distal PIPJ for same reasons as hammer toe

24
Q

What are curly toes?

A
  • Congenital usually affecting 3,4,5th digits and usually bilateral

- Tendon of FDL or flexor digitorum brevis too tight

  • Mainly asymptomatic and can have conservative treatment by stretching flexor tendons and extension. Surgery only considered after age 6 if pain
25
Q

What is achilles tendinopathy?

A

- Degenerative change of tendon due to years of misuse and poor training regimens (e.g sprinters).

  • Can be due to obesity and diabetes
  • Can be insertional (calcaneal) or non insertional tendinopathy at watershed area
26
Q

What are some signs and symptoms of achilles tendinopathy, and how is it treated?

A

Signs:

  • Pain and stiffness on tendon in morning or that worsens with activity
  • Severe pain 24 hours after exercising
  • Thickening of tendon
  • Swelling all times but worsens with activity
  • Palpable bone spur in insertional tendinopathy
27
Q

What is pes planovalgus?

A

- Flat foot: medial arch collapsed so medial border nearly touches floor and therefore lateral angulation of hindfoot

  • Most children appear flat footed until 5 as large amount of subcutaneous adipose tissue in sole of foot
  • Do not prescribe orthotics, will not help medial arch development
28
Q

What are the two types of flat feet?

A

- Flexible: No medial arch when standing but when on tip toes normal medial arch and hindfoot returns from valgus deviation

- Rigid: always abnormal. usually due to tarsal coalition during embryonic development. no arch when tiptoes and often needs treatment as symptomatic

29
Q

What is adult acquired flat foot?

A

- Dysfunction of posterior tibialis tendon, which usually supports medial arch

  • Stretching of spring ligament and plantar aponeurosis leading to talar head being displaced inferomedially flattening arch
30
Q

What are risk factors of adult acquired flat foot, what are the symptoms and how is it treated?

A

Risk: pregnancy (increased ligament laxity), obesity, hypertension, diabetes, middle-aged females

Symptoms: valgus deviation of hind foot with pain behind medial malleolus and patient reporting change in shape of foot

Treatment: Orthotics, physio to improve muscle strength, surgical reconstruction if secondary OA

31
Q

Why do people with diabetes mellitus have foot disease and what are common foot diseases associated with it?

A
  • Infection, ulceration, amputation, destruction

- Peripheral neuropathy: so loss of sensation so continue to weightbear

- Ischaemia: due to peripheral arterial disease

- Immunosupression: due to poor glycaemic control

32
Q

How is the risk of foot disease for diabetics managed?

A
  • Diabetic foot clinics looking for corns, cracks, dry skin
  • Check adequate shoes protective against trauma
  • Sensation and perfusion of feet
  • Tight glycaemic control emphasised
33
Q

What is Charcot Arthropathy?

A
  • Progressive destruction of bones, soft tissues and joints, most commonly in ankle and knee and diabetics
  • Neuropathy, abnormal loading of foot, repeating microtrauma with no healing and metabolic abnormalities lead to osteolysis, fractures,dislocation
  • Patient can’t feel foot so continue to walk on it and makes injury worse. Neuropathy can cause muscle spasticity
34
Q

What is a rocker bottom foot?

A

Often from charcot arthropathy

35
Q

How is charcot arthropathy treated?

A
  • Tight glycaemic control
  • Reduction of load on affected joints
  • Lose weight so less weight on joint
  • Remind them not to weight bear and teach about immunosuppression