DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
- Open dislocation, presence of multiple trauma, or other, more serious, injuries
- Inability to reduce dislocation or maintain reduction
- Neurovascular compromise
Discharge Criteria
- Closed injuries
- Adequate reduction
- No neurovascular involvement
- Orthopedic follow-up within 2–3 days
Issues for Referral
All patients with perilunate dislocations should be referred to a hand surgeon for surgical stabilization and ligament repair.
FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS
- All patients with a perilunate dislocation must follow-up with a hand surgeon for surgical stabilization and ligament repair.
- Follow-up should be within 2–3 days.
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
- Up to 25% of these injuries are missed on initial presentation.
- In a patient with wrist pain, swelling, and limited range of motion, it is important to obtain adequate x-rays of the wrist and make sure that the lunate and capitate are located in their fossa on the lateral wrist x-ray.
- Late presentation of these injuries leads to a very poor outcome and often requires a salvage operation.
- Complications include median nerve injury, tendon problems, complex regional pain syndrome, wrist instability, and post-traumatic arthritis.
- Even with appropriate treatment, there is a high incidence of post-traumatic arthritis and loss of grip strength.
ADDITIONAL READING
- Budoff JE. Treatment of acute lunate and perilunate dislocations.
J Hand Surg Am.
2008;33A:1424–1432.
- Forli A, Courvoisier A, Wimsey S, et al. Perilunate dislocations and transscaphoid perilunate fracture-dislocations: A retrospective study with minimum ten-year follow-up.
J Hand Surg Am
. 2010;35:62–68.
- Kardashian G, Christoforou DC, Lee SK. Perilunate dislocations.
Bull NYU Hosp Jt Dis
. 2011;69(1):87–96.
- Melsom DS, Leslie IJ. Carpal dislocations.
Curr Orthoped
. 2007;21:288–297.
- Stanbury SJ, Elfar JC. Perilunate dislocation and perilunate fracture-dislocation.
J Am Acad Orthop Surg
. 2011;19(9):554–562.
See Also (Topic, Algorithm, Electronic Media Element)
- Carpal Fractures
- Lunate Dislocation
- Scaphoid Fracture
CODES
ICD9
- 814.01 Closed fracture of navicular [scaphoid] bone of wrist
- 833.09 Closed dislocation of wrist, other
ICD10
- S62.009A Unsp fracture of navicular bone of unsp wrist, init
- S63.095A Other dislocation of left wrist and hand, initial encounter
- S63.096A Other dislocation of unspecified wrist and hand, initial encounter
PERIODIC PARALYSIS
Kyle R. Brown
•
Jeffrey N. Siegelman
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
- Periodic paralysis (PP): Disorder of muscle metabolism usually inherited that leads to flaccid extremity weakness. Exacerbated by hyperkalemia, hypokalemia, thyrotoxicosis
- Primary: Familial AD mutation skeletal muscle calcium, sodium, or potassium channel
- Secondary: Thyrotoxic, hypokalemia, hyperkalemia
EPIDEMIOLOGY
Incidence and Prevalence Estimates
- Hypokalemic PP (HypoPP):
- MC, 1:100,000 prevalence
- 1/3 new AD mutations
- Hyperkalemic PP (HyperPP):
- 1:200,000 prevalence
- 90% of people with mutation will have clinical symptoms
- Thyrotoxic PP (ThyroPP):
- Incidence 2% in patients with thyrotoxicosis
- Higher in Asians
- Subset of HypoPP, clinically identical
- Andersen–Tawil:
- Subset of HypoPP
- Rare
- Prevalence unknown
ETIOLOGY
- Mutation of skeletal muscle Na channel gene:
- SCN4A
- HypoPP, HyperPP:
- AD inheritance
- Spontaneous mutation
- Mutation of skeletal muscle calcium channel gene CACN1AS:
- Mutation of KCNJ2 gene:
- Andersen–Tawil:
- AD inheritance
- 50% spontaneous
- M>F
- Age of onset:
- HypoPP:
- HyperPP:
- Andersen–Tawil:
- ThyroPP:
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
History
- Intermittent weakness:
- Can be isolated
- Rapid onset
- Common for attacks to recur and for weakness to persist between attacks
- Frequency from single isolated to daily attacks
- Type of attack:
- Spontaneous
- At night or early morning
- Provoked:
- History of thyroid disease
- Recent carbohydrate rich meal
- Rest after strenuous exercise
- Illness
- Lack of sleep
- Medications: Insulin, epinephrine, corticosteroids, β-agonists, diuretics
- Cold environment
- Menstruation
- Reduced sleep
- Pregnancy
- Medications that induce thyroid disease
- Length of attack:
- HypoPP: 1 hr–days
- HyperPP: 15 min–4 hr
- ThyroPP: Same as HypoPP
- Andersen–Tawil: Variable
- Family history of episodes of weakness
Physical-Exam
- General:
- HEENT:
- HypoPP and HyperPP:
- Lid lag: Rare
- Difficulty swallowing: Rare
- ThyroPP:
- Andersen–Tawil:
- Dysmorphic features: Short stature, low set ears, broad based nose, micrognathia
- Cardiac:
- HypoPP and HyperPP:
- ThyroPP:
- Andersen–Tawil:
- Pulmonary:
- HypoPP:
- Can affect respiratory muscles, rare
- Severe hypokalemia
- M/S:
- HypoPP, HyperPP, ThyroPP:
- Symmetrical muscle weakness in 1 or more extremity
- Legs > arms
- Andersen–Tawil:
- Periodic flaccid muscle weakness <1 hr
- Proximal > distal
- Neuro:
- Alert, conscious
- Sensation intact
- DTR reduced or absent
- Skeletal muscle weakness, symmetrical
- Sphincter normal
- Skin:
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
Lab tests and EKG
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
- EKG:
- HypoPP:
- Sinus bradycardia
- Flattened T-wave
- ST-segment depressions
- HyperPP:
- ThryoPP:
- Tall P-waves, wide QRS, decreased T-wave, AV block, ventricular fibrillation or asystole
- Andersen–Tawil:
- Long QT, ventricular arrhythmias
- U-waves, prolonged T-wave downslope
- Differentiates Andersen syndrome from other long QT syndromes
- Electrolytes:
- Potassium:
- HyperPP: Normal or increased
- HypoPP: Normal or decreased
- ThryoPP: Decreased during attacks
- Andersen–Tawil: Decreased, normal, or increased
- Calcium:
- ThryoPP: Decreased during attacks
- Phosphorus:
- ThryoPP: Decreased during attacks
- Thyroid Studies:
Imaging
Not necessary for diagnosis
Diagnostic Procedures/Surgery
None in ED but specialists may consider the following: