Question 1881
Topic: 7. Hand and WristWhich of the following anatomic structures is labeled 6 in Figure 27?

Correct Answer & Explanation
. A2 pulley
Practice Set 95 of 266
This practice set contains high-yield board review questions covering key concepts in 7. Hand and Wrist. Each clinical scenario is designed to test your diagnostic and management skills relevant to this subspecialty.
Which of the following anatomic structures is labeled 6 in Figure 27?

. A2 pulley
Mechanical reduction of the pain associated with the condition shown in Figure 6 can be accomplished through the use of a cane on the contralateral side. Similarly, if this patient must carry any type of load in his or her arms, it should be carried

. on the ipsilateral side.
An 8-year-old boy falls and injures his thumb. A radiograph is shown in Figure 23. Initial management should consist of

. closed reduction.
The patient in Figure 55 is actively attempting to make a fist. This clinical scenario suggests which of the following anatomic lesions?

. Median nerve lesion in the arm
A 21-year-old man who was injured in a snowboarding accident 18 months ago now reports wrist pain. An MRI scan is shown in Figure 37. Based on the image findings, what is the most likely diagnosis?

. Scaphoid nonunion and osteonecrosis
A 25-year-old man shot himself at the base of the right index finger while cleaning his handgun. Examination reveals that the finger is cool and cyanotic. A clinical photograph and radiograph are shown in Figures 44a and 44b. What is the recommended treatment?

. Index ray amputation
A 28-year-old painter has had increasing pain in his hand and forearm after sustaining a paint injection wound to the tip of his left index finger 24 hours ago. Management should consist of

. emergent surgical debridement.
A 28-year-old anesthesia resident has aching pain in his dominant right forearm after injuring it while playing basketball 1 week ago. He reports that he is unable to perform regional anesthesia that requires manipulation of a needle. Examination reveals that he is unable to flex the interphalangeal joint of the thumb, and flexion of the distal interphalangeal joint of the index finger is weak. Management should consist of

. splinting followed by observation; surgical decompression of the anterior interosseous nerve may be required if no improvement is seen in 6 months.
A 42-year-old woman has persistent thumb pain that she notes is worse with opening jars and turning her car key. Opponens splinting provides some relief, but she is poorly tolerant of the splint. Finkelstein's test is negative, and a carpometacarpal grind test is positive. The radiographs shown in Figures 48a and 48b reveal minimal degenerative changes at the first carpometacarpal joint. What is the best course of action?

. Extension osteotomy of the first metacarpal
A 28-year-old woman fell on her right wrist while rollerblading 2 days ago. She was seen in the emergency department at the time of injury and was told she had a sprain. Examination now reveals dorsal tenderness in the proximal wrist but no snuffbox or ulnar tenderness. Standard wrist radiographs are normal. What is the next most appropriate step in management?
. PA clenched fist radiograph
The arrows in the axial T1-weighted MRI scan shown in Figure 25 show which of the following structures?

. Deep and superficial branches of the ulnar nerve
An otherwise healthy 25-year-old man sustained a wound with a 1-cm by 1.5-cm soft-tissue loss over the volar aspect of the middle phalanx of his middle finger. After appropriate debridement and irrigation, the flexor digitorum profundus tendon and neurovascular bundles are visible. The wound should be treated with a

. cross-finger flap.
A 34-year-old man sustains an extra-articular fracture of the proximal phalanx of his right index finger in a fall. Examination reveals that the fracture is closed and oblique in orientation. Closed reduction and splinting fail to maintain the reduction. Management should now consist of
. closed reduction and percutaneous pin fixation, followed by casting.
A patient undergoes the procedure shown in Figure 19. An important part of this procedure is preservation of what wrist ligament?

. Radioscaphocapitate
A previously healthy 65-year-old woman has a closed fracture of the right clavicle after falling down the basement stairs. Examination reveals good capillary refill in the digits of her right hand. Radial and ulnar pulses are 1+ at the right wrist compared with 2+ on the opposite side. In the arteriogram shown in Figure 36, the arrow is pointing at which of the following arteries?

. Axillary
A 12-year-old boy sustained a both bone forearm fracture 10 weeks ago and underwent closed reduction and casting. Examination now reveals that the injury is healed, but he is unable to extend his little and ring fingers of the injured hand with his wrist extended. Full extension is possible with the wrist flexed. A radiograph and clinical photograph are shown in Figures 15a and 15b. The remainder of his hand and wrist examination and neurologic evaluation in the hand are normal. What is the most likely diagnosis?

. Entrapment of the flexor digitorum profundus to the ring and little fingers
A 35-year-old man has numbness and tingling in the index, middle, and ring fingers. History reveals that he also has had vague wrist pain and stiffness since being injured in a motorcycle accident 1 year ago. Radiographs are shown in Figures 47a through 47c. Management should consist of

. carpal tunnel release.
A 32-year-old football coach has had a 4-month history of increasing right wrist pain, particularly during blocking exercises, and he reports significant pain with range of motion and gripping activities. He denies any history of trauma. Examination reveals dorsal wrist tenderness and boggy fullness over the dorsum of the wrist. No erythema is noted. Grip strength is 60% compared with the opposite side. Radiographs are shown in Figures 5a and 5b. What is the most likely diagnosis?

. Kienbock's disease
Figures 45a and 45b show the radiographs of a 40-year-old woman with rheumatoid arthritis who is unable to straighten her ring and little fingers. Examination reveals that the fingers can be passively corrected, but she is unable to actively maintain the fingers in extension. Management should consist of

. distal ulnar resection with an extensor indius proprius to extensor digitorum communis transfer.
. Medial collateral ligament injury