Saturday, November 20, 2010

Trousseau sign of latent tetany

Trousseau’s sign presents as carpopedal spasm occurring after a few minutes of inflation of a sphygmomanometer cuff above ............

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Saturday, October 30, 2010

Causalgia

DEFINITION: A syndrome of sustained burning pain after a traumatic nerve injury combined with vasomotor and sudomotor dysfunction and later trophic changes.


Causalgias are divided into two forms:
1. Causalgia major involves peripheral nerve injury with electrical "crosstalk" (ephapse) that causes severe hyperactivity of sympathetic system (hyperpathia, vasoconstriction, and movement disorder). The major form is severe, usually caused by injury with high velocity sharp objects (e.g., butcher's knife), vibratory component major trauma (e.g., bullet), or high-voltage nerve lesions (electrocution).

2. Causalgia minor involves the same principle as causalgia major, but milder injury, e.g., injury to the dorsum of hand or foot, nerve root contusion, patient falling from a height on gluteal region resulting in "guillotine" effect, bruising of nerve root caught at the narrowed intervertebral foramen.

SO,The difference between the two categories is a matter of degree and severity. To classify causalgia as an independent illness is artificial, and causalgia is nothing but a sever form of RSD(Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy ).

In this severe form of RSD, the course of the disease is quite accelerated from stage 1 through 4 in a matter of weeks or months. S. Weir Mitchell in 1872 first reported rapid development of atrophic changes in the skin, nails, and soft tissues of the extremity in a matter of days to weeks.
Whereas in RSD of disuse the extremity is cold, in ephaptic dystrophy the thermography reveals in the distal portion of the extremely cold extremity that there is an isolated hot spot that points to the area of scar formation and ephaptic peripheral nerve dysfunction . In this area the vasoconstrictive capability of the sympathetic nerve is paralyzed, and there is a topical hot spot. This hot spot can be appreciated only by thermograph.

CAUSALGIC PAIN:
- Usually pain occurs after the injury to a nerve trunk.
- The pain is spontaneous, severe, and quite persistent.
- There is a markedly lowered threshold for aggravation of pain. This is the case in all RSD patients, but it is more exaggerated in causalgics. So even a breeze over the skin or the touch of a bed sheet or a change of the environment or a family argument and aggravation can markedly aggravate the pain. This feature of emotional aggravation is common to all RSD patients, and it is nothing but the role of the frontal lobe and the limbic system in aggravation of hyperpathic pain.
- The pain is felt distal to the proximal nerve injury, i.e., in the hand or foot. This is typical but not invariable. The pain does not necessarily have to be a burning type of pain, and can be described in many other hyperpathic forms.

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Saturday, October 23, 2010

May-Thurner syndrome

The May-Thurner syndrome is the symptomatic compression of the left common iliac vein between the right common iliac artery and the lumbar vertebrae.

The normal anatomy is that the artery which runs to the right leg (= right common iliac artery) lies on top of the vein coming from the left leg (= left common iliac vein). This close proximity leads, in some people, to pressure of the artery onto the vein and to varying degrees of narrowing of the vein. This is referred to as "May Thurner syndrome". It is not a disease but a congenital anatomic variant. Mild and moderate degrees of narrowing are typically asymptomatic. More severe degrees can lead to obstruction of blood flow from the leg and thus to leg swelling and pain. The narrowed vein can also clot, resulting in left leg DVT.

The syndrome is named after the authors R. May and J. Thurner, who first described this phenomenon in 1957. It has also been termed the iliac compression syndrome. It is probably the reason why more DVTs occur in the left than in the right leg.

Compression of the iliac vein has been documented in approximately 50% of patients with left iliac vein thrombosis.

Several surgical treatment strategies have been employed in the past:
  1. venous bypass surgery of the narrowed area;
  2. cutting of the iliac artery and repositioning of the artery behind the iliac vein;
  3. construction of a tissue sling or flap to lift it off the iliac vein;
Since 1995 venous stents have been placed into the narrowed area, to pry them open . Unfortunately, there are no large studies that
(a) investigate the long-term success of the procedure, i.e. how often the stents improve symptoms and remain patent.
(b) whether patients should remain on long-term (lifelong) coumadin (warfarin) or not. Stents appear beneficial at least in the short-term improvement of symptoms, within the first 1-2 years of stent placement .

May-Thurner syndrome


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Saturday, October 2, 2010

Markel sign in heel jar test ,and others!!

Abdominal pain upon vibration (the heel jar test) is commonly known as which of the following?
  • a.Markel sign
  • b.Blumberg sign
  • c.Rovsing sign
  • d.Obturator sign
  • e.Iliopsoas sign
  • f.Courvoisier sign
  • g.Dance sign

The answer is (a).
The Markel sign(which is a maneuver to detect peritoneal irritation) is tested by the heel jar test; the patient stands on his or her toes, then allows his or her heels to hit the floor, thus jarring the body and causing abdominal pain in peritonitis.
The Rovsing sign occurs when palpation of the LLQ causes pain in the RLQ.
The obturator sign is pain occurring when the bent leg is rotated laterally and medially.
The iliopsoas sign occurs when the patient tries to raise the leg up against the hand of the examiner pushing down against the leg above the knee.

-The Markel sign,obturator sign, iliopsoas sign, and Rovsing sign are seen in appendicitis. A patient with appendicitis may also have pain on rectal examination if the posterior appendix is involved.

The Courvoisier sign is a palpable nontender gallbladder, which suggests neoplasm.
The Dance sign is the absence of bowel sounds in the RLQ due to intussusception

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Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Marjolin Ulcer-MRI

Malignant degeneration of untreated chronic wounds is a well-known complication. These rare, aggressive tumors that originate in chronically nonhealing wounds are called Marjolin’s ulcer. This is a 15 year old boy with long standing burn scar on the forearm.




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Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Shock Index

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Saturday, April 17, 2010

Classic Triads

Beck’s ,Cushing's ,Waddell's triads:
Beck’s triad
Beck's triad was described by the thoracic surgeon Calude S. Beck in 1935. It's components are:

1. Distended neck veins
2. Distant heart sounds
3. Hypotension

i.e. rising venous pressure, falling arterial pressure, and decreased heart sounds found in the presence of pericardial tamponade.



Cushing's triad (not to be confused with the Cushing reflex) is a sign of increased intracranial pressure. It is the triad of:

1. Hypertension (progressively increasing systolic blood pressure)

2. Bradycardia

3. Widening pulse pressure (an increase in the difference between systolic and diastolic pressure over time)

Cushing's triad suggests a cerebral hemorrhage in the setting of trauma or an space occupying lesion (e.g. brain tumor) that is growing and a possible impending fatal herniation of the brain. Cushing's triad is named after an American neurosurgeon Harvey Williams Cushing (1869-1939).



Waddell's triad
is recognized in clinical practice as associated with high-velocity accidents such as motor vehicle, auto-pedestrian, or bicycle crashes

Waddell's triad consists of

1. Femur fracture
2. Intra-abdominal or intrathoracic injury
3. Head injury,

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