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Upper Limb Orthopaedic Medicine Scope • • • • • Neck Shoulder Elbow Wrist Hand Neck • Chronic pain syndromes. • Mechanical neck pain. • Red flags: – Weight loss, anorexia, fever, dysphagia, hoarseness. – Neurological signs in arm. Neck • X rays. – Very poor correlation with symptoms. – 80% of people over 50 years will have abnormalities. – CT / MRI: 30% of people under 40 have abnormalities. • • • • • Collars probably useless. Traction ditto. Encourage home exercises. Simple analgesia. Keep on with work and normal activities. Shoulder Examination • Wasting of supraspinatus or infraspinatus suggests a rotator cuff problem. • Painful abduction arcs: – Starting at about 60° and easing or stopping after 120 ° suggests supraspinatus / cuff inflammation. – Starting at 90-120 ° and continuing suggests OA of one or more joints. – Passively abduct to 90 ° and internally rotate, suggests impingement of supraspinatus. Shoulder Examination • Can’t abduct due to weakness: passively abduct to 90 °, forward flex to about 30 ° and rotate internally (so the thumb points down). This isolates supraspinatus. Then ask ‘em to lower arm slowly – if it drops they have either a cuff tear or severe muscle atrophy. • Internal rotation: glenohumeral problems and frozen shoulder. Shoulder Examination • External rotation: tendonitis of cuff muscles and frozen shoulder. • Passive, as opposed to active shoulder movements improve with tendonitis but not arthritis or frozen shoulder. Shoulder Problems • Impingement syndromes(supraspinatus or rotator cuff tendonitis). – Common, =“rotator cuff syndrome”. – Pain often worse at night. – Pain during abduction (combing hair, reaching above head). – Chronically may lead to rotator cuff atrophy or tear. • • • • • Avoid precipitating factors. NSAID’s. Improving range of movement. Steroids into subacromial bursa. Surgical decompression (no use in rheumatoid). Shoulder Problems • Calcific tendonitis. – Hydroxyapatite deposits in supraspinatus tendon and subacromial bursa. – Presents acutely. – Check electrolytes and phosphate. • NSAID’s. • Steroid injection. Shoulder Problems • Biceps tendonitis. – Pain on carrying things with the elbow flexed. – If you inject the subacromial space some will get into the biceps sheath. Easier than getting the sheath ! – NSAID’s. Shoulder Problems • Frozen shoulder. – – – – Women:Men, 3:1. Insidious onset. Commoner after 50years. Global restriction of movement, external rotation most reduced. • • • • Physio – to gradually improve passive range of movement. NSAID’s. Glenohumeral steroid injection. AC & sternoclavicular arthritis. Shoulder Problems • Glenohumeral arthritis. – – – – Rarer than other joints. OA. Rheumatoid. Crystal arthropathies. • Physio to encourage use. • NSAID’s. • Steroid less helpful. Shoulder Problems • Acromoclavicular arthritis. – Tenderness over the joints. – AC joint problems often secondary OA from earlier sporting injuries. – AC joint pain after 90 ° of abduction and continues. – Easy to feel crepitus. – Common in IV drug users. Shoulder Problems • Sternoclavicular arthritis. – Tender over joint. – Most shoulder movements cause pain. – Common in IV drug users. Elbow • Medial epicondylitis. – – – – – Commonest cause of elbow pain. Pain on gripping. Wrist extensors. Forearm pain. Chronic pain syndromes also get pain here. • Resisted wrist extension is painful in epicondylitis but not in chronic pain syndromes. Elbow • Lateral epicondylitis. – Wrist flexors. – Check ulnar nerve as entrapment may mimic lateral epicondylitis. – Pain on gripping. – Chronic pain syndromes also get pain here. • Resisted wrist flexion is painful in epicondylitis but not in chronic pain syndromes. • Bilateral epicondylitis – think of the neck. Elbow • Olecranon bursitis. – – – – Common in rheumatoid. Trauma. Gout, pseudogout. Infection. Elbow • “Pulled elbow”. • OA. – Often secondary to rheumatoid or trauma. – Restricted movement. • First to appear is restriction in extension then pronation / supination. – Pain closer to joint. Wrist & Hand • Objective synovitis is easy to feel. • If multiple joints think of systemic arthropathies. • Heberden’s and Bouchard’s nodes. Wrist & Hand • De Quervain’s tendonitis. – Finkslstein’s test. – Extensor pollucis longus and abductor pollucis brevis. • • • • Avoidance of precipitants. Wrist splint. NSAID’s. Possibly steroid injection into sheaths. • Thumb OA. – Common of the carpometacarpal joint. – Sore in anatomical snuff box. Wrist & Hand • Trigger finger. – – – – Modify gripping if possible. NSAID’s. Steroid injection. Surgical decompression. • Carpal tunnel syndrome. – Should start with nocturnal pain – usually wakes them from sleep. – Should be proper dermatomal symptoms.