This document provides information on common foot and ankle injuries seen in the emergency room setting. It discusses the anatomy, biomechanics, evaluation, and treatment of lateral ankle sprains, which are the most common sports-related injury. It also reviews the management of ankle fractures, dislocations, and infections. Surgical options for lateral ankle reconstruction using allografts are presented.
The presentation includes new insight to rotator cuff anatomy, rotator cable, concept of force couple, different classifications of rotator cuff tear, signs and symptoms, special tests, non operative and operative management of rotator cuff tear, comparison of recent surgical modalities, management of irreparable cuff tears, post operative rehabilitation protocols, SLAP lesion, Parsonage Turner Syndrome
This slide is a brief overview of Femoral shaft fractures for undergraduate medical students (MBBS) . Video lecture of the content is available on
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4rHXKtG36HA
Feel free to drop in any comments or questions
Dear all,
This ppt contains the cause, types, clinical and radiological features, treatment and complication of Knee ligament injury and meniscus injury. I hope this is useful to you.
Thank you
The presentation includes new insight to rotator cuff anatomy, rotator cable, concept of force couple, different classifications of rotator cuff tear, signs and symptoms, special tests, non operative and operative management of rotator cuff tear, comparison of recent surgical modalities, management of irreparable cuff tears, post operative rehabilitation protocols, SLAP lesion, Parsonage Turner Syndrome
This slide is a brief overview of Femoral shaft fractures for undergraduate medical students (MBBS) . Video lecture of the content is available on
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4rHXKtG36HA
Feel free to drop in any comments or questions
Dear all,
This ppt contains the cause, types, clinical and radiological features, treatment and complication of Knee ligament injury and meniscus injury. I hope this is useful to you.
Thank you
Ankle and Foot Injuries for Athletes - Dr. Andre Ross - Livingston Library, 9...Summit Health
SMG Podiatric Surgeon, Dr. Andre Ross, presented Ankle and Foot Injuries for Athletes at Livingston Public Library. Foot and Ankle injuries make up roughly 25% of sports related injuries. Dr. Ross recommends seeking fast medical attention for these injuries before they result in a more serious conditions. It can make the difference between an early return to sport with full function vs. long term disability.
Describe about the chief complaints , gait assessment, special test and local examination of hip joint.
includes the special tests like thomas test, tredenlenberg test, DDH test etc..
Spinal stenosis is a degenrative spine disorder in which the AP and transverse diameter are decreased causing neural compression and symptoms of chronic & acute nerve compression
Evaluation of the Painful Shoulder Jacklyn Lindsay Quade_0.ppt
Lecture 41 parekh er f&a
1. Emergency Room:
Foot and Ankle Injuries
Selene G. Parekh, MD, MBA
Associate Professor of Surgery
Partner, North Carolina Orthopaedic Clinic
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery
Adjunct Faculty Fuqua Business School
Duke University
Durham, NC
919.471.9622
http://seleneparekhmd.com
Twitter: @seleneparekhmd
3. Lateral Ankle Sprains
• Most common specific injury in sports
• Finland 16-21% of all sports injuries
• Basketball 45% of injuries
• Soccer 31% of injuries
• Anatomy
4. Lateral Ankle Sprains
• Most common specific injury in sports
• Finland 16-21% of all sports injuries
• Basketball 45% of injuries
• Soccer 31% of injuries
• Anatomy
5. Lateral Ankle Sprains
• Most common specific injury in sports
• Finland 16-21% of all sports injuries
• Basketball 45% of injuries
• Soccer 31% of injuries
• Anatomy
6. Lateral Ankle Sprains
• Most common specific injury in sports
• Finland 16-21% of all sports injuries
• Basketball 45% of injuries
• Soccer 31% of injuries
• Anatomy
7. Lateral Ankle Sprains
• Biomechanics
• Dorsiflexion: ATFL loose, CFL taut
• Plantarflexion: ATFL taut, CFL loose
• ATFL
• Adduction in PF, restricts IR of talus in mortise
• CFL
• Adduction in neutral/DF
• PTFL
• Prevents ER in DF
• IOL
• Controls rotation
8. Lateral Ankle Sprains
• Pathology
• Associated injuries
• Tear of P. long/br.
• Talar chondral injury
• Medial ligament & syndesmotic injuries
• Fx lateral talus & fibula, 5th metatarsal fx, anterior process
calcaneus fx
• Post-sprain neuritis
9. Lateral Ankle Sprains
• Diagnosis
• Immediate swelling & pain, difficulty WB
• Tenderness over affected structures
• ROM
• Pain with anterior drawer, “suction sign” with anterior
subluxation of talus
• Inversion stress- pain/instability
21. Knee Surg SportTram Arth 2012
• Use of semitendinosus allograft tendon for
chronic lateral ankle instability
• Retrospective study of n=28 ankles
• Reconstruction ATFL/CFL with interference
screws
• Mean follow-up 19 months
• VAS scores 62 (p<0.05)
• AOFAS scores 6391 (p<0.05)
Taken from Caprio et al, Foot Ankle Clin 2006
22. Knee Surg SportTram Arth 2012
• Talar tilt 17.8 ° 6.7 °(p<0.05)
• Anterior drawer 10.0 4.5mm (p<0.05)
• 21/24 (88%) satisfied with surgery
• Conclusion
• Viable option for chronic lateral ankle instability
with poor ligamentous tissues
25. Tuberosity Avulsion
•Surgical urgency
• Pull of Achilles brings
fragment near skin
• Plantar flexion splint
in ER
• Percutaneous
reduction with lag
screws/plate
Collinge C and Heier K., OTA
29. Ankle Dislocations
• Usually associated w/ fractures
• Mechanism
• Foot usually in DF position
• Defined by direction of talus
• Medial, lateral, posteromed, posterior, rotatory
• Physical
• NV exam
• Gross deformity
• Diagnosis
• Ankle films
• Triage
• Refer to ortho immediately
• Treatment
• Reduce & repeat NV exam
• Jones dressing w/ splint or AO splint