Anatomy clinical correlates: Arm, elbow and forearm

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Anatomy clinical correlates: Arm, elbow and forearm

Medical and surgical emergencies

Cardiology, cardiac surgery and vascular surgery

Advanced cardiac life support (ACLS): Clinical (To be retired)

Supraventricular arrhythmias: Pathology review

Ventricular arrhythmias: Pathology review

Heart blocks: Pathology review

Coronary artery disease: Clinical (To be retired)

Heart failure: Clinical (To be retired)

Syncope: Clinical (To be retired)

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Chest trauma: Clinical (To be retired)

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Cholinomimetics: Direct agonists

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Muscarinic antagonists

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Adrenergic antagonists: Presynaptic

Adrenergic antagonists: Alpha blockers

Adrenergic antagonists: Beta blockers

ACE inhibitors, ARBs and direct renin inhibitors

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Hyperthyroidism: Clinical (To be retired)

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Neck trauma: Clinical (To be retired)

Insulins

Mineralocorticoids and mineralocorticoid antagonists

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Abdominal trauma: Clinical (To be retired)

Laxatives and cathartics

Antidiarrheals

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Hematology and oncology

Blood products and transfusion: Clinical (To be retired)

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Anticoagulants: Heparin

Anticoagulants: Warfarin

Anticoagulants: Direct factor inhibitors

Antiplatelet medications

Thrombolytics

Infectious diseases

Fever of unknown origin: Clinical (To be retired)

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Tuberculosis: Pathology review

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Urinary tract infections: Clinical (To be retired)

Meningitis, encephalitis and brain abscesses: Clinical (To be retired)

Bites and stings: Clinical (To be retired)

Skin and soft tissue infections: Clinical (To be retired)

Protein synthesis inhibitors: Aminoglycosides

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Protein synthesis inhibitors: Tetracyclines

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Nephrology and urology

Hypernatremia: Clinical (To be retired)

Hyponatremia: Clinical (To be retired)

Hyperkalemia: Clinical (To be retired)

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Acute kidney injury: Clinical (To be retired)

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Adrenergic antagonists: Alpha blockers

Neurology and neurosurgery

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Lower back pain: Clinical (To be retired)

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Anticonvulsants and anxiolytics: Barbiturates

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Chest trauma: Clinical (To be retired)

Bronchodilators: Beta 2-agonists and muscarinic antagonists

Pulmonary corticosteroids and mast cell inhibitors

Rheumatology and orthopedic surgery

Joint pain: Clinical (To be retired)

Anatomy clinical correlates: Clavicle and shoulder

Anatomy clinical correlates: Axilla

Anatomy clinical correlates: Arm, elbow and forearm

Anatomy clinical correlates: Wrist and hand

Anatomy clinical correlates: Median, ulnar and radial nerves

Anatomy clinical correlates: Bones, joints and muscles of the back

Anatomy clinical correlates: Hip, gluteal region and thigh

Anatomy clinical correlates: Knee

Anatomy clinical correlates: Leg and ankle

Anatomy clinical correlates: Foot

Acetaminophen (Paracetamol)

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Opioid agonists, mixed agonist-antagonists and partial agonists

Antigout medications

Transcript

Contributors

Viviana Popa, MD

Sam Gillespie, BSc

Alaina Mueller

Ursula Florjanczyk, MScBMC

The majority of things we do every day require the use of our arms and forearms. Sometimes we forget how heavily we rely on our arms, and are quickly reminded how important they are when injury occurs. So, let's take a look at common injuries occurring to the arm and forearm.

Alright, let's begin by looking at fractures of the humerus, the main bone of the arm. The most common kind are fractures of the surgical neck of the humerus, which occur more frequently in elderly people with osteoporosis who have structurally weaker bones. The cause is usually indirect trauma, like falling on the hand with an extended arm.

Surgical neck fractures can result in damage to nearby structures, such as the axillary nerve causing cutaneous deficits in the proximal lateral arm, as well as damage to the anterior and posterior circumflex humeral arteries.

Next, there are humeral shaft fractures, which are usually caused by direct trauma. Now, remember that the radial nerve passes through the radial, or spiral, groove on the back of the humerus, so a common complication of midshaft humeral fractures is radial nerve injury.

Radial nerve injury results in damage to the extensors of the wrist and potential wrist drop, as well as cutaneous sensation dysfunction of the dorsal hand, forearm, and upper arm. Additionally, the deep brachial artery travels with the radial nerve in the spiral groove and can also be damaged. Finally, distal humeral fractures are a result of trauma to the elbow region, or hyperextension injuries.

In a supracondylar fracture, which is a fracture above the epicondyles, an anteriorly displaced portion of the fractured humerus on the medial supracondylar region could injure the median nerve, resulting in wrist flexion weakness and cutaneous deficits of the anterior 3 and a half digits, as well as the brachial vessels.

Sources

  1. "Interventions for treating proximal humeral fractures in adults" Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews (2015)
  2. "Olecranon bursitis" Journal of Shoulder and Elbow Surgery (2016)
  3. "Treatment of olecranon bursitis: a systematic review" Archives of Orthopaedic and Trauma Surgery (2014)
  4. "The fate of missed atlanto-axial rotatory subluxation in children" Archives of Orthopaedic and Trauma Surgery (1998)
  5. "Low incidence of flexion-type supracondylar humerus fractures but high rate of complications" Acta Orthopaedica (2016)
  6. "Medial Epicondylitis" Journal of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons (2015)
  7. "Humerus fractures overview" StatPearls Publishing (2021)
  8. "Humeral shaft fractures" StatPearls Publishing (2021)
  9. "Fracture supracondylar humerus: a review" J Clin Diagn Res (2016)
  10. "Golfers elbow" StatPearls Publishing (2021)
Elsevier

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