Title: Common Problems of the Elbow, Wrist and Hand
1Common Problems of the Elbow, Wrist and Hand
2Common Problems of the Elbow, Wrist, and Hand
- Lateral epicondylitis
- Medial epicondylitis
- Cubital tunnel syndrome
- Wrist tendonitis/ganglion
- Carpal tunnel
- Dequervains/1st dorsal compartment tenosynovitis
- 1st CMC arthritis
- Trigger finger
- Metacarpal/finger fractures
- Tendon ruptures
3Lateral Epicondylitis
- What Is It? / Causes
- Degeneration or microinjury of the
- extensor carpi radialis brevis origin
- Lateral ligaments and joint capsule
- may also be involved
- Repetitive use/grip, occasionally injury
4Lateral Epicondylitis
- Where is it?
- Lateral epicondyle of the elbow
5Lateral Epicondylitis
- Complaints
- Tender lateral elbow
-
- Pain with gripping or grasping,
- especially with the elbow extended
- Pain with wrist extension
- Usually insidious onset
- with repetitive activity
6Lateral Epicondylitis
- Physical exam
- Tender lateral epicondyle
- Pain with grip with elbow extended
- Pain with wrist extension (especially
- with elbow extended)
- Normal ROM usually no swelling or defect
7Lateral Epicondylitis
- Treatment
- Rest
- NSAIDs
- Tennis elbow strap
-
- PT/OT
- Injection
- Surgical release
- /- arthroscopy
- Controversial
- shock wave, botox,
- PRP
8Lateral Epicondylitis
- Return to Work
- Variable. Some can work with brace
- others need full rest. Usually limited
grip/grasp and low weight - P-op Very limited 1st 10 - 14 days. No force
approx 6 weeks. Light duty 6 - 10 weeks
9Medial Epicondylitis
- What Is It?/Causes
- Degeneration/microinjury of the
- flexor/pronator origin
- Repetitive pronation/grip
- Valgus stress injury
- Much rarer than lateral epicondylitis
10Medial Epicondylitis
- Where is it?
- Medial epicondyle
- of the elbow
11Medial Epicondylitis
- Complaints
- Pain over medial epicondyle
- Pain with pronation or wrist flexion
- Usually insidious onset
12Medial Epicondylitis
- Physical exam
- Tender over epicondyle
- Pain with resisted pronation
- and wrist flexion
- Usually normal ROM and no swelling
13Medial Epicondylitis
- Treatment (all less effective than lateral
epicondylitis) - Rest
- NSAIDs
- Forearm brace
- PT/OT
- Injection
- Surgical release
- Controversial
- shock wave,
- ultrasound, PRP
14Medial Epicondylitis
- Return to Work
- Same as Lateral. Variable degrees
- of disability.
- P-op Very limited 1st 10 - 14 days then
- no force for up to 6 weeks. Light duty
- 6 - 10 weeks.
15Cubital Tunnel Syndrome
- What Is It? Causes
- Compression of the ulnar nerve at the elbow
- Direct blow to elbow
- Vibration tools
- Prolonged flexed elbow position
- Resting/leaning on elbow
16Cubital Tunnel Syndrome
- Where Is It?
- Ulnar groove
- of the medial
- elbow (funny bone)
17Cubital Tunnel Syndrome
- Complaints
- Posteromedial elbow pain
- Numbness/tingling small finger
- and half of ring finger
- Weak grip and key pinch
- Hand fatigue
18Cubital Tunnel Syndrome
- Physical exam
- Decreased sensation
- small finger half of
- ring finger
- Tinels at cubital tunnel
- Irritable nerve with palpation
- Weak 5th finger abduction
- Atrophy of 1st dorsal interosseous
- hypothenar muscles
- Positive NCTs/EMGs
19Cubital Tunnel Syndrome
- Treatment
- Avoid flexed elbow positions
- and resting on elbow (work ergonomics)
- Night splinting with
- arm at 45 degrees
- NSAIDs
- Cubital tunnel release,
- possible transposition
20Cubital Tunnel Syndrome
- Return to Work
- Relatively quick recovery from surgery
- or ergonomic changes. Slower from chronic
exposure - Transposition has similar RTW
- schedule as epicondylar release
21Wrist Tendonitis/Ganglion
- What is it?
- Inflammation of the tendons or wrist joint
-
- If there is enough inflammatory fluid,
- the capsule will pooch out
- and become a ganglion
- Over time, the fluid gels
- to the consistency of
- apple jelly
22Wrist Tendonitis/Ganglion
- Where is it?
- Synovial cyst at mid dorsum
- of wrist (70) volar wrist near
- radial artery (20), and rest
- usually base of finger
- or finger joint.
- Various tendons on each side
- of wrist
23Wrist Tendonitis/Ganglion
- Complaints
- Tendonitis Pain with grip/grasp,
- flex/extend, and rotation
- Ganglion Pain at cyst site, though can be
assymptomatic. Occasionally, numbness - in area
24Wrist Tendonitis/Ganglion
- Physical exam
- Tender wrist/tendon
- occasionally warm,
- no redness
- Pain with specific motions
- Firm lump
- Transillumination
25Wrist Tendonitis/Ganglion
- Treatment
- NSAIDs
- Wrist splint
- Avoid repetitive wrist use
- Injection as last resort
- Benign neglect
- Cyst aspiration - approx. 50 recurrence risk
- Surgical resection - less than 10 recurrence
26Wrist Tendonitis/Ganglion
- Return to Work
- Tendonitis limited duty with hand
- until Sxs resolve
- P-Op no hand duty for 10 -14 days,
- then limited lifting, grip, repetition
- for next 4 weeks
27Dequervains Tenosynovitis
- What Is It? Causes
- Stenosing tendonitis of the
- 1st dorsal tendon compartment
- Usually due to frequent
- thumb abduction with
- the wrist ulnarly deviated
- Usually gradual onset
28Dequervains Tenosynovitis
- Where Is It?
- Involves APL
- and EPB tendon
- sheaths at the level
- of the radial styloid
29Dequervains Tenosynovitis
- Complaints
- Radial sided wrist pain
- with thumb motion
- 40s-50s
- Women 4 - 6x more than men
30Dequervains Tenosynovitis
- Physical exam
- Tenderness and
- swelling 1-2 cm
- proximal to
- radial styloid
- Pain with resisted
- thumb abduction
- Positive Finklesteins test
- Negative X-rays
31Dequervains Tenosynovitis
- Treatment
- Thumb abduction
- splint
- NSAIDs
- Steroid injection
- (80 response)
- First dorsal compartment release (90 response)
32Dequervains Tenosynovitis
- Return to Work
- Limited pinch/grip.
- May need to work
- in thumb splint
- P-Op No hand duty
- for 10 - 14 days. Very
- limited 2 - 4 weeks
- as Sxs allow
33Carpal Tunnel Syndrome
- What Is It? Causes
- Increased pressure on the median nerve at the
wrist. - Swelling of lining of tendons
-
- Fluid retention
-
- Underlying nerve
- problems
- Repetitive Stress
- Vibrating tools
- Repetitive motions
- Poorly placed
- keyboard
34Carpal Tunnel Syndrome
- Where Is It?
- At the base of the palm
- Formed by bones of
- the wrist transverse
- carpal ligament
- Space in the wrist
- that holds nine tendons
- and the median nerve
35Carpal Tunnel Syndrome
- Complaints
- Numbness in the thumb, index, long,
- and ½ ring fingersusually worse at night
- Pain in wrist may extend into fingers
- and forearm
- Weak grip and clumsiness
36Carpal Tunnel Syndrome
- Physical Exam
- Positive Tinels
- Positive Phalens
- Thenar Atrophy
- NCT/EMGs
- (motor lat. gt 4.5,
- sensory lat. gt 3.5)
37Carpal Tunnel Syndrome
- Treatment
- NSAIDs if early
- Night splints
- Modify work environment
- Cortisone injection
- (best if lt 6 mos. sxs)
- Surgical release
- Laser, ionto, u/s,
- exercises all
- controversial
38Carpal Tunnel Syndrome
- Surgical treatment
- Goal is to enlarge tunnel
- and release pressure
- Accomplished by cutting
- transverse carpal ligament
- Outpatient procedure
- ¾ to 2 incision
- Local anesthetic
- Good relief of numbness pain
- Weakness may not improve entirely
- 90 satis. rate and 5 recurrence rate
39Carpal Tunnel Syndrome
- Return to Work
- Early with environment
- modifications
- P-Op Limited hand/finger duty
- first 14 days, then limited grasp
- for 2 - 8 weeks depending on Sxs
40Trigger Finger
- What Is It? Causes
- Painful catching, popping, or locking as digit is
flexed - and extended
- Pathology involves disproportion in size between
flexor tendons and their retinacular pulley at
the level of the metacarpal head - Most significant changes involve hypertropy of
the A-1 pulley - Etiology is disputed (inflammation of tendon
sheath and pulley, nodular tendon) - More common in women than men
- Peak ages 55 60
- Most commonly affected digit thumbgtringgtlonggtlit
tlegtindex
41Trigger Finger
- Where Is It?
- A1 pulley
- of flexor tendon
- Distal-most palmar crease
42Trigger Finger
- Complaints
- Mechanical catch or lock of finger
- when flexed
- Common 1st thing in the morning
- Pain at A1 pulley
43Trigger Finger
- Physical exam
- Tender A1 pulley
- Palpable catch at pulley
- Occasionally feel thickened nodule
44Trigger Finger
- Treatment
- NSAIDs (if early)
- Splinting (if early)
- Cortisone injection (if lt 6 mos.)
- Surgical release
45Trigger Finger
- Return to Work
- Usually can work through
- conservative treatment
- P-Op Limited hand duty 1st 10 -14 days,
- then some limited grip next 2 - 4 weeks
46Tendon Rupture
- What Is It? Causes
- Inability to flex or extend finger
- Usually associated with laceration
- Mallet or jersey fingers often
- without laceration
- Jamming finger or sudden flex/
- extension of set digit
47Tendon Ruptures
- Where Is It?
- Centrally along
- the tendon path
- from proximal
- to wrist
- to DIP joint
48Tendon Ruptures
- Complaints
- Inability to flex or extend finger
49Tendon Ruptures
- Physical Exam
- Inability to flex or extend finger
- Deep laceration adjacent to tendon, sometimes
with pearly-white tendon visible
50Tendon Ruptures
- Treatment
- Splint for mallet finger
- (must be worn all the time!)
- Can pin mallet finger
- All other complete tendon tears need repair
51Tendon Ruptures
- Return to Work
- Mallet fingers usually can work
- with splint on or pin in
- Other repairs need long-term protection
- and avoidance or unrestricted use
- Extensor tendons 8 - 12 weeks
- Flexor tendons 12 - 20 weeks
52Hand Fractures
- What is it? Causes
- Direct or indirect blow to hand
53Hand Fractures
- Complaints
- Swollen painful
- finger/hand
- often unable to
- touch area
- Often deformity
- of finger
54Hand Fractures
- Physical Exam
- Focally tender area,
- often with deformity
- Check flex/extension/
- rotation of digit
- If laceration, then
- emergency treatment
- X-ray is diagnostic
55Hand Fractures
- Treatment
- Non-displaced get splint
- Displaced gt 2 mm get surgery/reduction
- Angulated/rotated get surgery/reduction
56Hand Fractures
- Return to Work
- Fractures take at least
- 6 weeks to heal
- Difficult to work with
- most splints, especially
- first 10 - 14 days
- Plates/screws offer earlier mobilization but not
healing - Often weak for 2 - 3 months
57Thank You!