History Taking in Orthopedics

History taking

  • Patient’s story
  • Doctor/student reconstructs the history
    • Open ended questions
      • How do you feel now
    • Leading questions
      • What increases the pain?
      • Can you open a door key?
      • Can you comb your hair?

Orthopedics History

  • History Structure:

    • Patient Demographic
    • Chief Complaint
    • History of Presenting Complaint
    • Past medical/surgical history
    • Medication history
    • Family history
    • Personal history and background
    • Diet
    • Activity
    • Systemic review
  • Patient Demographic

    • Name
    • Age
    • Occupation
    • Hand Dominant
  • Chief Complaint:

    • Site
    • Onset
    • Progression
    • Management
  • History of Presenting Complaint

    • Pain
    • Swelling
    • Deformity
    • Limping
    • Stiffness
      • Usually related to function
    • Loss (altered) function
      • Caused by: stiffness / pain / deformity / instability / weakness
    • Altered sensation
  • Pain

    • Site
    • Onset
    • Character
    • Radiation
    • Associations
    • Time course
    • Exacerbating/relieving factors
    • Severity

SOCRATES

  • Site:

    • Referred Pain perceived at a location other than the site of the painful stimulus. this pain referred along the tissues developed from the same sclerotome -somite. e.g. Discogenic pain with no thecal or root compression radiated from L-S spine to groin, gluteal region, but not down to the knee. Hip: to the medial aspect of the thigh and knee
    • Radiating pain: pain begins in one place and travels to another location along the path of a nerve. e.g. Sciatica :root pain radiated to lower limb below the knee
  • Onset:

    • When did it start?
  • Was it

    • Gradual or sudden? (acute – related to incident/action)
    • Constant or intermittent?
  • Character:

    • What is the pain like e.g.
      • Sharp,
      • Burning
      • Tight?
  • Radiation:

    • Pain perceived at the site of stimulus and radiate to another site
    • Does it radiate/move anywhere?
  • Associations:

    • Is there anything else associated with the pain e.g.
      • Swelling
      • Sweating
      • Fever
      • Vomiting
  • Time course:

    • Does it follow any time pattern, how long did it last?
  • Exacerbating/relieving factors:

    • Does anything make it better or worse?
  • Severity:

    • How severe is the pain
    • Consider using the 1-10 scale

SOCRATES

  • Stiffness

    • Patients complain of loss of/altered function, not stiffness
      • Can not comb hair, can not bend forward, can not sit cross-legged, can not sit in prayer, …
    • Joint involved
    • Cause:
      • Real stiffness of joint / mechanical block
      • Protective mechanism:
        • Muscle spasm to avoid pain on movement of joint
    • Generalized: systemic disease
      • e.g. Rheumatoid Arthritis, Ankylosing spondylitis
    • Localized
      • To a particular joint
  • Swelling

    • Soft tissue, joint, bone
    • After trauma:
      • Injury or reactive
    • Rapid or Slow developing
      • Rapid: bleeding / Slow: effusion
    • Painful vs. Painless
    • Constant vs. comes and goes
    • Size:
      • Same, increasing, decreasing
  • Deformity

    • Progressive, or improving?
    • Impairing function?
    • Associated with
      • Pain
      • Stiffness
      • Other metabolic diseases
  • Functional affection:

    • Relate to normal function of part
      • Walking
      • Bending, Praying
      • Going to toilet
      • Sitting cross-legged
      • Eating
      • Reaching,
      • Holding,
      • Opening,
      • etc…
  • Instability

    • Joint “gives way” or “jumps out of place”
  • Weakness

    • Generalized: part of a systemic disease
    • Localized: Patients usually describe it as:
      • The limb is “dead” / “heavy”
  • Associated conditions / other diseases

  • Careful about history of mild trauma

    • History of mild trauma, especially in children, can be a normal daily occurrence
  • Past medical/surgical history

  • Medication & Allergy history

  • Family history

    • Genetic - e.g. RA, CDH
    • Communicable - e.g. TB
  • Personal history and background

    • Occupation
    • Travel
    • Recreation
    • Home condition
    • Drug or Alcohol abuse
  • Diet

    • Food / drinks (good and bad!)
    • Sun exposure
  • Activity

  • Systemic review

    • Respiratory – e.g. TB
    • UTI – source of infection
    • GIT – deficiency
    • Renal – disease

Summary - History-taking

  • Chief complaint
    • Onset, Progression, Management
      • Pain
      • Swelling
      • Deformity
      • Limping
      • Stiffness
      • Loss (altered) function
      • Altered sensation
    • Detailed mechanism of injury in trauma
      • High velocity Vs. Low velocity
      • Open Vs. Closed
  • Relate to function