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Published byCatherine Nicholson Modified over 8 years ago
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Hand Injuries Dr Mark Putland MBBS FACEM Emergency Physician Bendigo Health Care Group 22/9/2011
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Basics History – AMPLE – Handedness – Occupation – Leisure
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Basics Exam – Position – Posture – Wound – Bones and Joints – Tendons – Vascularity and bleeding – Nerves – Function
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Basics Digital Nerve Block
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Fingers Tuft Fracture Closed Open Subungual haematoma Nail bed laceration Only one of these is a tuft fracture. Which?
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Fingers Transverse Fracture of the Distal Phallanx Distal to the DFP insertion so stable – Reduce and splint – Occasionally need a K-wire Watch for mallet finger deformity with the more proximal ones
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Fingers Mallet Finger Avulsion of the insertion of FDP (central band)
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Fingers Mallet Finger Avulsion of the insertion of FDP (central band) ORIF if – >2mm # – >⅓ joint surface – Penetrating injury
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Fingers Mallet Finger Avulsion of the insertion of FDP (central band) ORIF if – >2mm # – >⅓ joint surface – Penetrating injury Otherwise splint 24-7 for 6 weeks and then use night splinting and sports protection
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Fingers Middle Phalanx Fracture Transverse or commminuted need fixation Spiral tend to be stable (splinted by tendons – Splint (MCP at 90° and wrist at 45° extension) – Clinic – Early protected motion
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Fingers Intra-articular middle phalangeal fracture <30% of joint surface – Soft tissue injury >30% of joint surface – fixation Avulsion? Of what? What soft tissues might be injured?
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