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Musculoskeletal Diseases and Disorders

This document provides an overview of the musculoskeletal system and common musculoskeletal diseases and disorders. It describes the components of the musculoskeletal system including bones, joints, muscles, tendons and ligaments. It then discusses various disorders that can affect these structures such as spinal deformities, herniated discs, osteoporosis, fractures, osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, gout, and myopathies. For each condition, it provides details on etiology, symptoms, diagnostic testing, and treatment approaches.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
186 views45 pages

Musculoskeletal Diseases and Disorders

This document provides an overview of the musculoskeletal system and common musculoskeletal diseases and disorders. It describes the components of the musculoskeletal system including bones, joints, muscles, tendons and ligaments. It then discusses various disorders that can affect these structures such as spinal deformities, herniated discs, osteoporosis, fractures, osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, gout, and myopathies. For each condition, it provides details on etiology, symptoms, diagnostic testing, and treatment approaches.

Uploaded by

Diana Junita
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Musculoskeletal Diseases and

Disorders
Chapter 15
Musculoskeletal System
 Bones
 Long, short, flat, irregular
 Compact, spongy

 Joints
 Bursae
 Muscles
 Tendons
 Ligaments
Musculoskeletal System
 Two divisions:
 Axialskeleton
 Appendicular skeleton (inc. pelvic girdle)

 Muscle types:
 Skeletalmuscle (voluntary, striated)
 Smooth muscle (involuntary, non-striated)
 Cardiac muscle (involuntary, striated)
Disorders of Bone
 Spinal deformities
 Herniated intervertebral discs
 Osteoporosis
 Osteomyelitis
 Paget’s Disease (osteitis deformans)
 Fractures
Spinal Deformities
 Lordosis
 Abnormal “inward” or anterior curvature
 Accentuation of normal curve of lumbar spine
 Frequently gradual onset
 Affects lumbar spine
 Also called “swayback”
Spinal Deformities
 Kyphosis
 Abnormal “outward” curvature of the spine
 Accentuation of normal thoracic spine curvature
 Also called “humpback” or “roundback”
 Commonly due to pathological fractures of spine in
osteoporosis
Spinal Deformities
 Scoliosis
 Lateral(sideways) curvature of the spine
 May go to left or right
 May involve some rotation of spinal column
 May be caused by discrepancy in leg lengths
 Surgery possible if interferes with breathing or mobility
Spinal Deformities
 Etiologies
 Posture,leg length differences, congenital, epiphyseal
growth disturbance, trauma, tumors, infection, arthritis,
TB, endocrine abn, aging
 S/S: usually backache, fatigue, abnormal
appearance or fitting of clothes
 Treatment: PT, exercise, braces, surgery, pain
relief
Herniated Intervertebral Discs
 Disc Anatomy
 Annulus fibrosis
 Nucleus pulposis
 Herniation
 Nucleus pulposis pushes through annulus into spinal
canal
 Rupture
 Pieces of the disc are free in the spinal canal
Herniated Disc
 S/S:
 Back pain
 Paresthesias
 Sciatica: inflammation of sciatic nerve, leg pain

 Treatment:
 PT, exercise, pain relief meds, surgery (rarely), life
correctly
Osteoporosis
 Metabolic disorder of bones
 Less bone mineral (calcium) than normal
 Over 10 million in US affected
 Post-menopausal females most commonly
 Bones are brittle, porous, easily broken
 More prone to pathological fracture
Osteoporosis
 Etiology:
 Genetics, calcium intake & dietary, sedentary lifestyle,
estrogen, vit D, or adrenal deficiency, steroid use,
alcoholism, etc
 S/S: often asymptomatic until pathological fx.
 Treatment: calcium supplements, meds
(antiresorptive, restorative of lost bone, etc)
Osteomyelitis
 Acute or chronic bone infection
 Inflammation, edema, circulatory problems
 More common in children
 Etiology:
 Trauma most commonly with bacterial invasion from
the skin
 Infection may also spread from adjacent tissues or
blood supply
Osteomyelitis
 Risk factors:
 Diabetes,orthopedic hardware, splenectomy & SSA,
hemodialysis, IV drug users
 S/S:may be asymptomatic for years
 Treatment:
 Long-term antibiotics, sometimes surgical debridement
Paget’s Disease
 Osteitis
Deformans
 Chronic metabolic bone disease
 High rate of bone turnover (reabsorption & deposition)
 Thicker but softer bone is the result
 Patients typically over 40 YOA
 One or many bones
 Usually lower torse involve
Paget’s Disease
 Etiology: Unknown
 S/S: graduation onset of swelling & pain
 Treatment:
 PT, pain management, surgery
 Medications (biphosphonates or calcitonin)
 Joint replacements
Fractures
 Closed/simple
 Open/compound
 Greenstick
 Displaced
 Comminuted
 Segmental
 Spiral
 Pathological
Fractures
 Etiology: trauma or disease
 S/S: usually pain and swelling
 Treatment:
 Rest, decreased use
 Splint, sling, cast
 Surgery (ORIF, etc)
Joint Diseases
 Osteoarthritis
 Rheumatoid Arthritis
 Gout (gouty arthritis)
Osteoarthritis
 Most common form of arthritis
 Chronic inflammation causing degeneration and
new bone formation
 Weight-bearing joints most common
 Knees, hips
 Common in older patients (over 55 YOA)
 In over 70 YOA, females more frequently affected
Osteoarthritis
 Etiology:
 Mechanical, chemical, genetic, autoimmune, metabolic
 Aging seems to be important

 S/S:
 May be asymptomatic indefinitely
 Pain, swelling, sometimes erythema, limitation of motion

 Treatment:
 Anti-inflammatories, PT, exercise, surgical
Rheumatoid Arthritis
 Chronic, systemic, polyarticular inflammatioy
disease
 Destruction(erosion) of bone & cartilage
 Causes ankylosis (fibrous fusion of joints, immobile)

 Exacerbations and remissions unpredictable


 Affects mostly females
 Increasing risk with advancing age
Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA)
 Etiology: autoimmune, genetics
 S/S: symmetric pain, swelling of hands & fingers,
also other LE joints, systemic (fever, fatigue, wt.
Loss)
 Dx testing: Rheumatoid factor blood test
 Treatment:
 Antiinflammatories, PT, antimetabolites, antirheumatic
drugs
Gout
 Gouty arthritis
 Chronic uric acid metabolism disorder
 Uricacid crystals deposited in joints
 Tophi formation (urate compounds) around joints
 Acute, severe episodes of arthritis
 Mostly male patients
 Other associated problems:
 Kidney stones, renal failure, hyperuricemia
Gout
 Etiology:
 Metabolic, renal, some genetics
 S/S:
 Severe signs & symptoms of inflammation
 Big toe is classical site
 Treatment:
 Pain relief, antiinflammatories, colchicine, diet low in
purines, alopurinol
Muscles & Connective Tissue
Diseases
 Sprains & strains
 Bursitis & tendonitis
 Carpal Tunnel Syndrome
 Myasthenia Gravis (MG)
 Polymyositis
 Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE)
 Duchenne’s Muscular Dystrophy
Sprains & Strains
 Sprain
 Ligamentous tearing/stretching after a tortion injury
 Strain
 Tearing/stretching of tendon or muscle
 Etiology: trauma or overuse
 S/S: localized pain, swelling, limitation of motion
 Treatment: supportive, pain relief
Bursitis & Tendonitis
 Bursitis
 Inflammation of fluid-filled bursae near joints
 Shoulder, hip, elbow, knee
 Tendonitis
 Inflammation of tendon or tendon-muscle attachement
 Shoulder, wrist, Achilles, hamstring
 Etiology:trauma, excessive use, other diseases
 S/S: pain, swelling, LOM, fluid accumulation
Bursitis & Tendonitis
 Treatment
 Varies with anatomic location & degree of disability
 Anti-inflammatories & pain relievers, splinting,
exercise, orthotics, steroid injections, PT
Carpal Tunnel Syndrome
 Compression of median nerve within the carpal
tunnel of the wrist
 Common syndrome with repetitive use work
 Involves pain, sensory & motor symptoms
 Etiology: edema within the carpal tunnel, causing
inflammation of the nerve & other structures there
Carpal Tunnel Syndrome
 S/S:
 Wrist pain, burning or tingling paresthesias, numbness
 Weakness of hand grasp
 Tinel’s sign

 Treatment:
 Wrist immobilization, anti-inflammatories
 Rarely surgery
Myasthenia Gravis
 Rare, autoimmune disorder of the neuromuscular
junction
 Antibodies against the acetylcholine receptors
(post-synaptic)
 Chronic, progressive disease causing sporadic
weakness of the skeletal muscles
 Most common in females, ages 20-40 YOA
Myasthenia Gravis (MG)
 Reduced muscle strength & longer recovery time
with repeated use
 Symptoms late in the day
 Bulbar (eye & facial) muscles involved first
 Facial expression, drooping lids, etc.

 Thymomas in 15% MG patients


 75% have some thymic abnormality (hyperplasia)
MG
 Diagnostic testing:
 Tensilon test (edrophonium challenge will increase
muscle strength)
 Treatment:
 Oral anticholinergic meds (pyridostigmine,
neostigmine), immune suppressives, cholinesterase
inhibitors like edrophonium
 Prognosis: normal life expectancy in modern times
Polymyositis
 Chronic, idiopathic inflammatory disease of
connective tissues and muscles
 Exacerbations & remissions
 May have skin involvement (dermatomyositis)
 females more than males
 Bimodal peak of onset: 5-15 YOA & 50-70YOA
Polymyositis
 S/S: sudden or slow weakness of muscle group over
weeks to months
 Often have trouble arising from sitting or raising arms above
head, also voice changes
 Fever, fatigue, weight loss
 Skin: lilac-colored rash of eyelids, nose and face

 Dx via EMG & muscle biopsy


 Treatment: immune suppressive
Systemic Lupus Erythematosus
 Lupus or SLE
 Multisystem, autoimmune, inflammatory disease
due to antibodies against cell nuclei
 Females outnumber male patients ( 9 to 1)
 Genetics may also be involved
 Arthralgias are first complaint in most patients
SLE
 Organ involvement:
 Skin,renal, CNS, GI, blood, musculoskeletal, CV,
pulmonary, vascular endothelium (Raynaud’s)
 Four criteria at any time:
 Malar rash or discoid rash, photosensitivity, arthritis,
renal disease, neuro, skin, hematologic, or immune
disorders, +ANA blood test
SLE
 Treatment:
 Anti-inflammatories, pain relief, immune suppressives
Duchenne’s Muscular Dystrophy
 Inherited, x-linked, recessive disorder
 Seenonly in males
 Occasionally no family history
 Rapidly progressive wasting of skeletal muscles
 First in lower extremity & pelvis, then generalizes
 Usuallyappears by 6 YOA
 Cause of death: respiratory insufficiency usually
by 25 YOA
Duchenne’s Muscular Dystrophy
 At first muscles appear larger
 Due to fat and CT infiltration
 Then atrophy (wasting, decrease in size)
 Then scarring & contractures
 Cardiomyopathy present in almost all cases
Neoplasms
 Osteogenic sarcoma
 Chondrosarcoma
 Malignant giant-cell tumor
Osteogenic Sarcoma
 Most common bone cancer
 3rd most common cancer in adolescence
 Slightly more males
 Risk factors: radiation therapy, genetics
 Treatment: surgical, but mets later in 80%
 Most in long bones
 Femur, tibia, humerus (in that order)
Chondrosarcoma
 2ndmost frequent primary bone cancer (25%)
 Malignant tumor of cartilage
 Mostly over 40 YOA (mostly geriatric)
 Affects pelvis, femur, humerus, ribs
Giant Cell Tumor
 Multinucleated cells
 5-10% of all giant cell tumors are malignant
 Recurs locally about 50% of the time
 Only 4-5% of all bone tumors
 Mostly long bones
 Mostly 20-40YOA
 Relatively good Px after tumor excision

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