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Soft Tissue Disorders and Fibromyalgia

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Soft Tissue Disorders and Fibromyalgia Jaya Ravindran Consultant Rheumatologist Introduction Definitions Approach to soft tissue disorders Overview of some soft ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Soft Tissue Disorders and Fibromyalgia


1
Soft Tissue Disorders and Fibromyalgia
Jaya Ravindran Consultant Rheumatologist
2
Introduction
  • Definitions
  • Approach to soft tissue disorders
  • Overview of some soft tissue conditions
  • Flexor tenosynovitis
  • De Quervains
  • Carpal tunnel
  • Golfers/Tennis elbow
  • Rotator Cuff
  • Trochanteric bursitis
  • Achilles tendonitis
  • Fibromyalgia

3
  • WHAT ARE TENDONS, LIGAMENTS, ENTHESIS AND BURSA?

4
Definitions
  • Ligament
  • A band of tough connective tissue that connects
    bone to bone
  • Tendon
  • a tough band of fibrous connective tissue that
    connects muscle to bone
  • Enthesis
  • the point at which a tendon inserts into bone,
    where the collagen fibres are mineralised and
    integrated into bone tissue
  • Bursa
  • a fluid filled sac located between a bone and
    tendon which normally serves to reduce friction
    between the two moving surfaces

5
  • THOUGHT PROCESS/ISSUES IN SOFT TISSUE DISORDERS?

6
Approach to soft tissue disorders
  • History and examination paramount
  • Differentiate from inflammatory/mechanical
    arthropathy
  • Think about anatomy of area and mechanism of
    injury/overuse to understand pathology
  • Work history
  • Precipitating activity

7
Approach to soft tissue disorders
  • Could it be referred pain eg C5/6 Neck pain
    radiating to shoulder ask about neurological
    symptoms
  • May be associated with inflammatory arthritis eg
    RA or psoriatic arthritis or systemic illness
  • Bloods not helpful in making diagnosis
  • Imaging - X-ray and ultrasound may play a role in
    certain soft-tissue disorders

8
  • JOINT vs PERIARTICULAR?

9
Is it an articular or extra-articular problem?
  • ARTICULAR PERI-ARTICULAR
  • pain all planes pain in plane of tendon
  • active passive active gt passive
  • capsular swelling/effusion linear swelling
  • joint line tenderness localised tenderness
  • diffuse erythema/heat localised erythema/heat

10
Management
  • Rest
  • Simple analgesia
  • NSAIDs
  • Local steroid injection
  • Physiotherapy/Occupational therapy
  • Surgery in certain cases e.g. carpal tunnel

11
  • Features of flexor tenosynovitis ?

12
Flexor tenosynovitis
  • Inflammation of flexor tendon sheaths
  • Pain and stiffness in flexor finger/thumb, may
    extend to wrist
  • Reduced active flexion, crepitus, thickened
    tender tendon sheaths
  • May be associated with nodule trigger finger
  • Can be associated with RA, Diabetes
  • Treatment injection hydrocortisone, surgery

13
  • Features of De Quervains?

14
De Quervains (tenosynovitis)
  • Inflammation of tendon sheath containing extensor
    pollicis brevis and abductor pollicis longus
    tendons

15
De Quervains (tenosynovitis)
  • Pain, swelling radial wrist
  • Localised tenderness, crepitus, pain worse over
    radial styloid
  • Finkelsteins test

16
De Quervains (tenosynovitis)
  • Finkelstein
  • With the thumb flexed across the palm of the
    hand, ask the patient to move the wrist into
    flexion and ulnar deviation.
  • Positive if reproduces pain

17
De Quervains (tenosynovitis)
  • Management
  • Rest from precipitating activity
  • Splintage
  • Steroid injection
  • surgery

18
  • Features and causes of carpal tunnel syndrome?

19
Carpal tunnel syndrome
  • Compression of median nerve as it passes through
    carpal tunnel

20
Carpal tunnel syndrome
  • Common, FgtM, elderly/middle aged
  • Mostly idiopathic
  • Associated with (particularly if bilateral)
  • Diabetes
  • Hypothyroidism
  • RA
  • Pregnancy
  • Acromegaly
  • Vasculitis
  • Trauma
  • Others (e.g. amyloid, sarcoid)

21
Carpal tunnel syndrome - anatomy
  • Median nerve supplies
  • Motor (beyond carpal tunnel in hand)
  • L lateral two lumbricals
  • O opponens pollicis
  • A abductor pollicis brevis
  • F flexor pollicis brevis
  • Sensory
  • Palmar surface thumb, lateral 2 ½ digits

22
Carpal tunnel syndrome
  • Clinical features
  • Numbness/parasthesia in median nerve distribution
  • Pain, can radiate up arm
  • Worse at night
  • Hang hand over end of bed
  • Weakness of thumb (abduction)
  • Thenar wasting
  • Positive Tinels/Phalens

23
Carpal tunnel syndrome
Phalens
Tinels
24
Carpal tunnel syndrome
  • Investigation
  • Nerve conduction studies show reduce nerve
    conduction velocities across wrist
  • Management
  • Avoidance of precipitating activity
  • Night time splints
  • Local steroid injection
  • Surgery division of flexor retinaculum and
    decompression of carpal tunnel (80 success)

25
  • Features of epicondylitis ?

26
Tennis Golfers Elbow
  • Both enthesopathies
  • Tennis elbow lateral epicondylitis
    inflammation common extensor origin
  • Golfers elbow medial epicondylitis
    inflammation common flexor origin
  • Tennis elbow more common than Golfers

27
Tennis Golfers Elbow
  • Pain localised to specific area
  • Elbow flexion/extension does not cause pain
  • Pain upon
  • resisted wrist extension (Tennis)
  • resisted wrist flexion (Golfers)

28
Tennis Golfers Elbow
  • Management
  • Rest from precipitating activity
  • Elbow clasps
  • Local corticosteroid injection
  • Physiotherapy ultrasound and acupuncture
  • Surgery (often ineffective)

29
  • Rotator cuff disease features?

30
Rotator Cuff Pathology
  • A range of various conditions, including
  • Supraspinatous tendinitis/rupture
  • Rotator cuff tear
  • Adhesive capsultitis (frozen shoulder)
  • Acute calcific supraspinatous tendonitis
  • Subacromial bursitis
  • Acromioclavicular joint OA
  • Overlap in clinical features but distinct
    entities

31
Rotator Cuff anatomy
  • A sheath of conjoint tendons to support
    glenohumeral joint, made up of
  • S supraspinatous - abduction
  • I infraspinatous external rotation
  • T teres minor external rotation
  • S subscapularis internal rotation

32
Rotator Cuff Syndrome
  • Spectrum from mild supraspinatus tendinitis to
    complete tendon rupture
  • Chronic impingement of cuff under acromial arch
  • Pain often over acromial area extending into
    deltoid

33
Rotator Cuff Syndrome
  • Painful mid arc
  • Impingement test abducted, flexed and
    internally rotated
  • Supraspinatus stress

34
Rotator cuff investigation - ultrasound
  • Full thickness tear

35
Rotator Cuff Syndrome
  • Management
  • Rest, NSAIDs
  • Local steroid injection around tendon
    subacromial space and PT
  • If chronic/rupture refer to Orthopaedics for
    surgical opinion

36
Acute calcific supraspinatus tendinitis
  • Calcium hydroxyapatite deposition near
    supraspinatus enthesis
  • Young adults, FgtM, acute pain over several hours
  • Normally resolves over few days
  • Treatment
  • Minor NSAID
  • Moderate consider steroid injection
  • Severe consider aspirating calcified material

37
Adhesive capsulitis (Frozen shoulder)
  • Progressive pain and stiffness
  • Global reduction in movement, but particularly
    external rotation
  • Three phases
  • Pain (3-5 months)
  • Adhesive phase (4-12 months)
  • Recovery phase (12-42 months)

38
Adhesive capsulitis (Frozen shoulder)
  • Associated with diabetes
  • Most patients recover by 30 months, but still
    have reduced movements
  • Management
  • Analgesia, NSAIDs, Physiotherapy, steroid
    injection
  • Surgical opinion in difficult cases (manipulation
    under anaesthesia)

39
  • ACJ disease features ?

40
Acromioclavicular OA
  • High arc pain
  • Local tenderness
  • Adduction painful
  • Impingement

41
  • Trochanteric bursitis features?

42
Trochanteric bursitis
  • Inflammation of the superficial and deep bursa
    that separates the gluteus muscles from the
    posterior and lateral side of the greater
    trochanter of the femur

43
Trochanteric bursitis
  • Boring pain over lateral aspect of hip
  • May radiate down lateral thigh
  • Worse on walking or lying in bed at night
  • Localised tenderness upon pressure over greater
    trochanter

44
Trochanteric bursitis
  • Management
  • Rest
  • Analgesia
  • Steroid injection
  • Physio

45
Achilles tendonitis
  • Inflammation of the achilles tendon
  • Sometimes at enthesis
  • Sometimes in middle avascular portion of tendon
  • Can be seen with seronegatives

46
Achilles tendonitis
  • Chronic tendonitis can lead to Achilles tendon
    rupture
  • Aetiology of tendonitis though to be avascular
    degeneration of tendon
  • Tenosynovitis does not lead to rupture
  • Also can get acute traumatic rupture
  • All have localised pain and swelling of Achilles
    tendon, with difficulty walking

47
Achilles tendonitis
  • Investigation - ultrasound
  • Management
  • Rest, NSAIDs, physiotherapy
  • Local steroid injection under U/S guidance into
    paratenon can help tenosynovitis if no evidence
    of tear

48
Achilles rupture
  • Acute rupture sudden calf pain as if being hit
    on back of leg
  • Palpable gap in tendon
  • Some but little plantarflexion
  • Squeeze calf whilst prone - no plantarflexion in
    affected leg (Simmonds)
  • Management
  • Surgery to repair tendon
  • Conservative below knee cast in ankle equinus 6
    weeks

49
  • Fibromyalgia features ?

50
Fibromyalgia
  • All over pain
  • Fatigue
  • Sleep disturbance
  • Depression
  • Anxiety
  • Irritable bowel
  • Tender spots
  • Diagnosis of exclusion

51
Prevalence/Risk Factors
  • Common
  • Approx 2-5 depending upon definition
  • Female (FM ratio between 31 and 71)
  • Middle age (typically 30-60)

52
Differential diagnosis
  • Other conditions can mimic fibromyalgia
  • Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE)
  • Hypothyroidism
  • Polymyalgia rheumatica
  • Malignancy
  • Myopathy
  • Metabolic bone disease

53
Management
  • Patient education
  • About condition
  • Reassure that no serious pathology
  • No harm in exercising
  • Cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT)
  • Low dose amitriptyline
  • Graded aerobic exercise regime

54
  • THANK-YOU
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