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Musculoskeletal System

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Reassess distal function Remember No matter how bad the fracture our priorities are the ABC s Hazards of Improper ... mid-shaft femur fracture without hip ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Musculoskeletal System


1
Musculoskeletal System
  • Emergencies

2
Functions of the Musculoskeletal System
  • Gives the body shape
  • Protects internal organs
  • Provides for movement
  • Consists of more than 600 muscles

3
Anatomy
  • Muscles - provide movement
  • generate heat.
  • Ligaments - connect bone to bone
  • injury sprain
  • Tendons - connect bone to muscle
  • injury strain
  • Bones - protection shape

4
The Skeletal System
  • Gives form to the body
  • Protects vital organs
  • Consists of 206 bones
  • Acts as a framework for attachment of muscles
  • Designed to permit motion of the body

5
The Skull
6
The Neck
7
The Spinal Column
8
The Thorax
9
The Pelvis
10
The Lower Extremity
  • Hip
  • Thigh
  • Knee
  • Leg
  • Ankle
  • Foot

11
The Upper Extremity
  • Shoulder girdle
  • Arm
  • Elbow
  • Forearm
  • Wrist
  • Hand

12
Joints
13
Types of Muscle (1 of 2)
  • Skeletal (voluntary) muscle
  • Attached to the bones of the body
  • Smooth (involuntary) muscle
  • Carry out the automatic muscular functions of the
    body

14
Types of Muscle (2 of 2)
  • Cardiac muscle
  • Involuntary muscle
  • Has own blood supply and electrical system
  • Can tolerate interruptions of blood supply for
    only very short periods

15
Injuries
  • Sprain
  • Strain
  • Dislocation
  • Closed fracture
  • Open fracture

16
Sprains Strains
  • Sprain
  • Joint injury with tearing of ligaments
  • Strain
  • Stretching or tearing of a muscle

17
S/S
  • Pain
  • Edema and Ecchymosis
  • Joint instability
  • Treatment - immobilize, ice, elevate if
    possible

18
Dislocation
  • A disruption of a joint, in which the bone ends
    are no longer in contact and the supporting
    ligaments are torn

19
S/S of a Dislocation
  • Marked deformity
  • Edema
  • Pain
  • Tenderness on palpation
  • Complete loss of joint function
  • Distal numbness
  • Treatment - immobilize, ice, elevate if possible.

20
Fractures
  • Closed fracture
  • does not break the skin
  • Open fracture
  • External wound
  • Nondisplaced fracture
  • Simple crack
  • Displaced fracture
  • deformity

21
Closed fracture
  • Signs symptoms
  • Pain
  • Edema
  • Possible deformity
  • Contusion
  • Loss of motion
  • false motion
  • Crepitus
  • Guarding
  • Treatment - immobilize, ice, elevate if possible.

22
Open fracture
  • Signs symptoms
  • Pain
  • Deformity
  • Break in skin and/or exposed bone
  • Treatment - dressing, immobilize, ice, elevate
    if possible

23
Old terminology
  • Simple compound

24
Types of Fractures
  • Green stick
  • Spiral
  • Transverse
  • Comminuted
  • Pathologic
  • Epiphyseal

25
complications of fx
  • blood vessel nerve damage
  • Fat embolus
  • disability or deformity

26
Bleeding (internal)
  • Bones have a blood supply!
  • Fractures bleed internally -
  • Femur - 1 liter
  • Pelvis - 1 liter
  • Tibia - 500 cc

27
Other considerations
  • What is beneath fracture site?
  • open fracture
  • Joint involved?

28
Tips other stuff
  • Angulation or angulated extremity
  • Depressed skull fracture
  • Basilar skull fracture
  • Flail Chest

29
Hip Injury
  • Hip Fracture classic presentation
  • Shortened, externally rotated
  • Hip Dislocation
  • Usually flexed and internally rotated
  • Requires significant force

30
TX
  • draw-sheet method
  • Make NO attempt to straighten leg
  • Support with rolled blankets
  • Prevent hip movement

31
Assessment of injured extremities
  • PMSC
  • Pulse
  • Movement
  • Sensation
  • Capillary refill
  • Cold, blue, pulseless extremity has circulation
    problem

32
ALWAYS CHECK DISTAL FUNCTION BEFORE AFTER
SPLINTING !!!!!
  • AND DOCUMENT WHAT YOU FOUND !!

33
Splinting
  • Why we splint...
  • relieve pain
  • reduce tissue/vessel damage during movement

34
Types of splints
  • Self splinting
  • Pillows, blankets, items of clothing
  • Sling swath
  • Rigid
  • Cardboard
  • plastic
  • ladder
  • Air or vacuum
  • Traction

35
Traction splints
  • Closed, mid-shaft femur fracture without hip,
    knee, or ankle injury.

36
General Principles of Splinting (1 of 2)
  • Remove clothing area
  • PMSC
  • Dress all wounds
  • Do not move the patient before splinting

37
General Principles of Splinting (2 of 2)
  • Immobilize the joints
  • Pad rigid splints
  • Maintain manual immobilization.
  • Realign angulations PRN
  • When in doubt, splint
  • Reassess PMSC
  • Immobilize all suspected spinal injuries in a
    neutral in-line position
  • pain, resistance, crepitus

38
Realignment issues
  • NEVER REALIGN A JOINT
  • NEVER REALIGN A INJURY WITH GOOD DISTAL FUNCTION
  • Only pulseless, longbone fractures

39
Basic Realignment Steps
  • Have all equipment ready in place
  • Explain procedure to patient
  • In 1 move, with gentle traction, align extremity
    (goal is anatomical position)
  • Use the least amount of force necessary.
  • If resistance is met or pain increases, splint in
    deformed position.
  • Reassess distal function

40
Remember
  • No matter how bad the fracture our priorities are
    the ABCs

41
Hazards of Improper Splinting
  • Further damage
  • Delay in transport
  • Reduction of distal circulation
  • Aggravation of the injury
  • Injury to tissue, nerves, blood vessels, or muscle

42
end
  • Questions???
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