1 / 41

COMMON HAND PROBLEMS RELATED TO WORK

COMMON HAND PROBLEMS RELATED TO WORK. Prasad G. Kilaru MD Plastic, Reconstructive & Hand Surgery. Agenda. Injury types Basic anatomy  Mechanism of action Diagnosis Treatment  Prevention  Education. Repetitive Stress Injury. Nerve: Carpal tunnel syndrome, cubital tunnel syndrome

viet
Download Presentation

COMMON HAND PROBLEMS RELATED TO WORK

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. COMMON HAND PROBLEMS RELATED TO WORK Prasad G. Kilaru MD Plastic, Reconstructive & Hand Surgery

  2. Agenda Injury types Basic anatomy  Mechanism of action Diagnosis Treatment  Prevention  Education

  3. Repetitive Stress Injury • Nerve: • Carpal tunnel syndrome, cubital tunnel syndrome • Tendon: Connects muscle to bone • Repetitive injury at muscle insertion • Trigger digit, DeQuervain’s tenosynovitis • Repetitive injury at muscle origin • Lateral epicondylitis, Medial epicondylitis • Ligament: Connects bone to bone • Chronic collateral ligament injury, TFCC injury • Joint Problems • Ganglion cyst, Mucous cyst, Basal joint arthritis

  4. Traumatic Injury • Tendon injury • Flexor, extensor, muscle belly injury • Injury to tendon insertion • Mallet finger, Flexor tendon avulsion • Bony Injury • Nerve Injury • Joint Injury • Sprain, dislocation

  5. Anatomy - Nerve • Median nerve – Mixed nerve • Sensory – Volar aspect of palm and radial 3 ½ fingers • Motor – Major finger and wrist flexors, thenar muscles and radial lumbricals • Ulnar nerve – Mixed nerve • Sensory – Ulnar aspect of volar and dorsal palm and ulnar 1 ½ fingers • Motor – Ulnar wrist and finger flexors and intrinsic muscles of the hand

  6. Anatomy - Nerve

  7. Anatomy - Nerve • Radial nerve – Mixed nerve • Sensory – Dorsal aspect of hand and radial 3 ½ fingers dorsally • Motor – Extensors of the elbow, wrist and fingers • Sensory to palm and fingers • Volarly – Radial 3 ½ fingers and palm – Median nerve, Ulnar 1 ½ fingers and palm – Ulnar nerve • Dorsally – Radial 3 ½ fingers and hand – Radial nerve, Ulnar 1 ½ fingers and hand – Ulnar nerve

  8. Anatomy Carpal Tunnel

  9. Anatomy of Flexor Pulley System

  10. Anatomy – Extensor Compartmetns

  11. Mechanism of Action Repeated movement/use causes swelling over affected region Repeated movement/use despite swelling causes worsening of swelling Feedback loop set up with worsening symptoms Depending on the structure effected – numbness, pain, locking etc.

  12. Nerve Compression Syndromes • Median nerve compression (carpal tunnel syndrome) occurs from compression of the nerve at the wrist • Ulnar nerve compression can occur at the wrist or elbow • Radial nerve compression usually occurs in the forearm • Pressure buildup can occur from decrease in the size of the tunnel(bone overgrowth, fracture) or increase in the volume of the contents of the tunnel(tendinitis, fluid buildup etc.)

  13. Tendinopathies Repeated movement/use of tendons causes tendons to swell up and get trapped in tunnels either over fingers or wrist (trigger finger, DeQuervain’s tenosynovitis) Repeated movement/use at tendon origin causes microtears which cause chronic tears near common extensor (lateral epicondylitis) or common flexor (medial epicondylitis) origin

  14. Nerve Compression Signs & Symptoms • Symptoms commonly include pain, numbness, tingling and in late stages weakness in grip • Symptoms are usually felt at night and can occasionally wake patients from sleep • The numbness is usually along the distribution of the effected nerve • Severe cases can result in muscle wasting with weakness and permanent sensory loss

  15. Nerve Compression Diagnosis • History and physical examination are usually indicative of nerve compression • Tinel’s sign, nerve compression test, Phalen’s test are all positive • Nerve conduction study and EMG are often confirmatory

  16. Tendinopathy Diagnosis • Usually presents with locking or snapping of the finger or thumb on flexion that holds the finger in flexion(trigger finger) • There is usually tenderness over the MP joint volarly and a nodule or thickening is usually palpable in the same region(trigger finger) • Pain over the first dorsal compartment at the anatomic snuff box (deQuervain’s tenosynovitis) • Finkelstein’s test is usually positive (deQuervain’s tenosynovitis)

  17. Tendinopathy Diagnosis • Patients usually have point tenderness over the lateral or medial epicondyle (epicondylitis) • Pain can be reproduced by wrist or finger extension (lateral epicondylitis) or flexion (medial epicondylitis)

  18. Treatment Options • Noninvasive options – Initial approach • Ergonomic evaluation • Work modification, • Splints/braces that immobilize the affected area • NSAIDS or steroidal anti-inflammatories • Topical anti-inflammatory modalities, ice, • Physical therapy

  19. Treatment Options • Steroid injections • At least 3-4 months apart, no more then 2 a year • Avoid injections near nerves • Side effects • Surgical options • When conservative measures fail or cannot be implemented • In late cases – severe compression on NCS/EMG

  20. Treatment Options • For compressive pathology - basic principle is to release the area of constriction • transverse carpal ligament for carpal tunnels syndrome • A1 pulley for trigger digits • First dorsal compartment release • For nerve compression, surgery reverses symptoms for early cases and prevents progression of disease in late cases • “Wont get any worse – how much better depends on extent of the damage” • Surgery usually a cure – recurrence rare

  21. Treatment Options • For tendinopathies, surgery considered when conservative therapy fails • Requires debridement of the inflamed tendon and associated bone spurs and reattachment of the extensor/flexor origin • Recovery longer with surgery around elbow • Therapy needed for splinting, movement etc.

  22. Preventive Measures • Prevention of repetitive trauma • Ergonomic evaluation and implementation • Regular stretching and strengthening • “Preparation for a marathon” • Learning to recognize early symptoms • Preventive maneuvers

  23. Education • Teaching patients to recognize early symptoms • Preventive measures • Medication • Splinting • Anti-inflammatory modalities • Stretching and strengthening exercises

  24. Ligament Injuries • Chronic collateral ligament injuries • Usually common to the MP joint of the thumb • Splinting, casting, surgery • TFCC injury • Involves ulnar aspect of wrist • Related to trauma or repetitive injury • Splinting, steroid injections, casting, surgery

  25. Basal Joint Arthritis • CMC joint of the thumb most common site for degenerative arthritis in the hand • Related to chronic repetitive use or previous injuries to the thumb • Starts with pain at the base of the thumb, progressing to weakness • Treatment entails rest, NSAIDs, splinting, steroid injections and surgery

  26. Ganglion Cysts • Common soft tissue mass over the hand or fingers, is a ganglion occasionally associated with repetitive or strenuous activity • Can be volar or dorsal, over the wrist or fingers • Treatment • If asymptomatic, can be left alone • Aspiration of the cyst, rupture(by over inflation) or infiltration with steroids has a high rate of recurrence(>50%) • If symptomatic, resection is usually recommended

  27. Mallet Finger • “Droop” of the DIP joint of a finger with intact passive extension, but no active extension • Usually due to avulsion of the tendinous insertion of the extensor tendon or a fracture avulsion at the base of the distal phalanx • This requires splinting in extension for a prolonged period of time and if a fracture is present or is chronic may require surgical correction

  28. Summary • Careful history and physical examination usually goes a long way in obtaining a diagnosis • Rest, splinting and NSAIDS a good start for most repetitive injuries • Ergonomic evaluation can resolve or prevent many cumulative trauma disorders • Early referral to a hand surgeon, can prevent delay in diagnosis or treatment of many common hand problems

  29. Take Away Points Patient and employer education Prevention Early intervention Diagnosis & treatment

  30. THANK YOU

More Related