Hand and Wrist Injuries in the Work Place€¦ · Scaphoid Fractures - Exam •Tenderness to...

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Hand and Wrist Injuries in the Work Place

Christian Skjong, MDHand & Upper Extremity Surgery

September 2019

Quick Bio

• Grew up in rural Minnesota • Carleton College • University of Chicago

• Medical School & Orthopedic Residency • Brown University

• Hand & Upper Extremity Fellowship

• AMA Certified in the Evaluation of Disability and Impairment • Perform IMEs

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Work Comp Injuries

1. Worse functional outcomes

2. Longer recovery

3. Increased overall expense

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Work Comp Injuries

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National Safety Council

Goal

•To better understand and recognize 4 common hand and wrist injuries, their rehab and return to work expectations in the setting of Work Comp

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The “Much Dorkier” Big 4

•Distal Phalanx Fractures

•Scaphoid Fractures

•Distal Radius Fractures

•Carpal Tunnel Syndrome

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Phalanx Fractures

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Introducing…

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Distal Phalanx Fracture

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Distal Phalanx Fracture

•Most commonly fractured bone in the hand

•Often the result of a crushing injury

•Presentation• Tender, swollen fingertip • Subungual Hematoma

Distal Phalanx Fracture

•Subungual hematoma suggests nail bed injury that may necessitate repair

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Distal Phalanx Fractures – Treatment

•Majority heal without issue• Painless, fibrous nonunion

•Splinting for 3-4 weeks allowing IP joint motion• Tip protector

•Widely displaced fractures may require surgery• Percutaneous pinning

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Scaphoid Fractures

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Scaphoid Fractures - Exam

•Tenderness to palpation in anatomic snuffbox is indicator of possible scaphoid injury•XR (including scaphoid view) may be negative if acute injury

• Occult scaphoid fracture

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• If any concern, treat as if fracture

• Repeat XR in 2-3 weeks to look for signs of fracture healing

• Advanced Imaging - MRI

Scaphoid Fractures

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Distal Waist Proximal

Scaphoid Fractures

•Most common carpal bone fracture•Tenuous blood supply necessitates early diagnosis and appropriate treatment

• Risk of nonunion increases with • More proximal fractures• Displaced fractures• Delayed diagnosis

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SNAC Wrist

Scaphoid Nonunion Advanced Collapse

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Scaphoid Fracture – Treatment

•Nonoperative • Thumb spica cast – 3 months (!!)

• Stable, nondisplaced fractures• Concern for occult fracture

•Operative• Screw fixation +/- bone graft

• Displaced fractures• Nonunions

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Distal Radius Fractures

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Distal Radius Fractures

•One of most common orthopaedic injuries

•Bimodal distribution• Younger patients – high energy• Older patients – low energy falls

• High incidence in women over 50 years old• Decreasing bone density• Can be predictor of future fracture risk• Consider DEXA

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Distal Radius Fractures – Patterns

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Distal Radius Fracture – Treatment

Nonoperative

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4-6 weeks duration

Distal Radius Fracture – Treatment

Operative

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Distal Radius Fracture – ORIF

•Volar plate and screw construct the most common method of fixation for most fractures

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Carpal Tunnel Syndrome

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MjolnirStormbreaker “Great Odin’s raven! I’m developing carpal tunnel syndrome!”

Carpal Tunnel Syndrome

• Tricky in Work Comp setting!

• Correlation does not always equal Causation

• BUT…

• Illinois = work only has to contribute to “injury”

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Presenting Symptoms

• Numbness, tingling in median nerve distribution─ Increased at night or with work─ Relief with dependency, shaking hand

• Swelling of hand• Weakness, clumsiness, dropping objects

What is the carpal tunnel?

What is carpal tunnel syndrome?

• Pinching of median nerve

─ Numbness/tingling

─ Weakness/muscle atrophy

Carpal Tunnel Syndrome (CTS)

• Most common compressive neuropathy of the upper extremity

• Etiology─ Most cases are idiopathic (no specific cause) ─ Incidence increases with age

─ Other causes: ganglion cysts, arthritis, pregnancy

Diagnostic Nerve Testing

• EMG and NCV• Tests how well nerves are working

CTS - Treatment

• Nonsurgical─ Initial treatment for most idiopathic

cases• Night Splint• Corticosteroid injection

CTS - Treatment

• Surgical carpal tunnel release

─ Indications• Failure of nonoperative treatment

• Chronic cases with significant denervation or muscle atrophy

• i.e. already late stage

Return to Work Plan

• Ultimately treat patients the same whether work comp or not

• Set realistic expectations• Rehab/Therapy • RTW – Light Duty • RTW – Full Duty• MMI

Rehab/Therapy Expectations

• Phalanx Fractures• Start immediately vs at 4 weeks

• Depends on fracture

• Scaphoid Fracture• Start at 2-3 months

• Distal Radius Fracture • Start at 4-6 weeks – nonop• Start at 1 week - operative

Average Total Duration: 1-2x/week for 4-6 weeks

Rehab/Therapy Expectations

• Carpal Tunnel Syndrome • Normally no therapy required

• AAOS Guidelines = No benefit over patient directed

• Major limitations:• Healing of incision• Persistent palm pain

Return to Work Expectations

KEY:Every patient is different.

Return to Work Expectations

Light Duty Full Duty MMIPhalanx Desk w/in 2 wks 2 mo 4-6 mo

Manual Labor 1-2 mo 3 mo

Scaphoid Desk w/in 2 wks 3-4 mo 4-6 moManual Labor 3-4 mo 4-6mo

Distal Radius Desk w/in 2 wks 2-3 mo 4-6 moManual Labor 2-3 mo 3-4 mo

Desk: typingManual Labor: lifting, pushing, pulling

Return to Work – Full Duty

In setting of fractures =

Requires• Solidly healed bone • Full (or max attainable)

• Range of motion • Strength

Tricky!!

Return to Work Expectations

Light Duty Full Duty MMIPhalanx Desk w/in 2 wks 2 mo 4-6 mo

Manual Labor 1-2 mo 3 mo

Scaphoid Desk w/in 2 wks 3-4 mo 4-6 moManual Labor 3-4 mo 4-6mo

Distal Radius Desk w/in 2 wks 2-3 mo 4-6 moManual Labor 2-3 mo 3-4 mo

Desk: typingManual Labor: lifting, pushing, pulling

Return to Work Expectations

Light Duty Full Duty MMICarpal Tunnel Syndrome

Desk w/in 2 wks 2-4 wks 2-3 mo

Manual Labor 4-6 wks 3 mo 4-6 mo

Desk: typingManual Labor: lifting, pushing, pulling

Take Home Points50

Take Home Points

•Fractures of the hand/wrist • Require careful consideration of nonoperative vs operative treatments

•Return to work (esp. Full Duty) can be prolonged with fractures• Particularly with scaphoid fxs

•Carpal tunnel syndrome • Difficult to determine causation

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Take Home Points

•Ultimately try and set realistic expectations and treat work comp patients similarly to non-work comp

• Can be difficult at times

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Thank You!53