1 – Introduction, gait cycle, symptoms in orthopaedic disorders
11. Gait and limping
- Gait
- Has two phases
- Stance phase – lasts from the moment the heel touches the ground until the foot lifts off the ground
- Heel strike
- Rolling
- Lift-off
- Swing phase – lasts from the moment of lift-off until the heel touches the ground
- Acceleration
- Swing-through
- Deceleration
- What to assess in a patient’s gait
- The character
- The step length
- The width
- Whether there is limping
- Whether the pelvis remains level during walking
- Whether the shoulders remain level during walking
- Limping
- = the movement of the lower limbs is no longer symmetrical, or the phases of the two lower limbs differ
- Potential causes of limping
- Limb length discrepancy (discrepancy gait)
- Normal 1 – 1,5 cm
- Contractures (range of movement restrictions) or ankylosis (contracture gait)
- Muscle atrophy/weakness or paralysis (paralytic gait)
- Pain (antalgic gait)
- Joint instability
- Limb length discrepancy (discrepancy gait)
- Discrepancy gait
- Causes lateral pelvic tilt
- Due to discrepancies in limb length
- Antalgic gait
- Patient limps to avoid pain
- The stance phase on the painful side or limb is shortened
- Paralytic gait
- Due to muscle weakness or paralysis
- Trendelenburg limping
- A special form of paralytic gait
- Due to weakness of gluteus medius, often due to superior gluteal nerve lesion
- Pelvis tilts toward the contralateral side during the stance phase
- Contracture gait
- Due to contractures in muscle, skin, or joints
15. Ultrasound imaging in orthopaedics
- Used to investigate soft tissues
- Tendons
- Muscles
- Ligaments
- etc.
- Can be used for functional and dynamic examination
- I.e., muscle movement can be detected
- Used for examination of
- Soft tissue cysts
- Tendons
- Soft tissue tumours
- Can also be used therapeutically
- Used in physiotherapy
- US provides heat, etc. to deep tissues
- Speeds up healing of muscles, tendons, ligaments, etc.
27. Joint movements, contractures, ankylosis, measurement methods in orthopaedics
- Joint movements
- The passive movements of the affected/painful joint and the contralateral joint should be examined for contractures (range of motion), pain and crepitation
- Joints should physiologically not extend beyond 0° – if so, it’s called hyperextension
- If the examination of the joint movements is limited by pain they should be re-examined during anaesthesia before the surgery
- Contractures
- = decrease of range of motion of a certain movement
- Any joint can experience contracture in any movement
- If a knee cannot be flexed as much as much as normal, the patient has a knee extension contracture
- The knee motion stops in extension, before it reaches complete flexion
- If an elbow cannot be extended as much as normal, the patient has an elbow flexure contracture
- The elbow motion stops in flexion, before it reaches complete extension
- General causes
- Scarring of the skin
- Muscle paralysis or constriction
- Neuromuscular diseases, like Heine-Medin disease or infantile cerebral paresis
- Changes in the joint and capsule
- Very common in osteoarthritis, developmental dysplasia of the hip
- Can be due to inflammation, trauma or repeated surgeries
- Thomas test
- A test which tests for hip flexion contracture
- Patient is supine on table
- Passively flex the hip and knee of the unaffected leg
- Positive test: The patient will reflexively lift the thigh of the other, affected leg
- Negative test: The affected leg remains on the table
- Increased range of motion of joints
- Opposite of contracture
- Often a symptom of a connective tissue disease like Marfan
- Ankylosis
- = Total loss of joint motion due to bony or fibrous jusion
- Causes
- Ankylosing spondylitis (Bechterev disease)
- Psoriatic arthritis
- Rheumatoid arthritis
- Postoperative arthrofibrosis
- Limb length discrepancy
- Measurement
- Performed with limbs in extension and parallel position
- Measured between easily palpable bony surfaces, or easily visible structure
- For upper limbs: length between acromion and styloid process of radius
- For lower limbs: length between anterior iliac spine OR umbilicus, and the medial malleolus
- Length must always be compared between limbs
- Is best measured by x-ray or CT
- Normal length discrepancy: 1,0 – 1,5 cm
- Causes
- Idiopathic
- Osteoarthritis
- Tumour
- Trauma
- Developmental dysplasia of the hip
- Clinical features
- Limping
- Lower back pain
- Scoliosis
- Treatment
- Orthopaedic shoes – see topic 55
- Limb equalization – see topic 25
- Measurement
50. Joint motions, measurement of muscle strength
- Joint motions
- Shoulder
- Abduction 90 degrees
- Elevation another 90 degrees
- Flexion 90 degrees
- Elevation another 90 degrees
- Internal rotation 90 degrees
- External rotation 50 degrees
- Abduction 90 degrees
- Elbow
- Flexion 150 degrees
- Extension 10 degrees
- Supination 90 degrees
- Pronation 90 degrees
- Wrist
- Palmarflexion 50 degrees
- Dorsiflexion 40 degrees
- Ulnar deviation 30 degrees
- Radial deviation 30 degrees
- Hip
- Flexion 130 degrees
- Abduction 30 degrees (when standing)
- Adduction 30 degrees (when standing)
- Internal rotation 40 degrees (when flexed)
- External rotation 30 degrees (when flexed)
- Knee
- Flexion 130 degrees
- Extension 10 degrees
- Slight internal and external rotation in flexed position
- Ankle
- Dorsiflexion 30 degrees
- Palmarflexion 40 degrees
- Eversion, inversion
- Pronation, supination
- Shoulder
- Measurement of muscle strength
- Determined by physical examination or EMG
- Scale:
- 5 – Normal strength (full function even against great resistance)
- 4 – Muscle function only against limited resistance
- 3 – Muscle function against the action of gravity
- 2 – Muscle function only in the absence of gravity
- 1 – Only muscle fibrillation is visible
- 0 – Total paralysis