Back to A-Z


Suchresultate

Anzahl Ergebnisse für die Suche nach «hand» gefunden: 53

  • Hand

    Hand Inspection General assessment of age, inflammation, atrophy, deformity, and asymmetry. Age-related changes include prominent veins on the dorsum of the hand, mild atrophy of the intrinsic...

  • Rheumatic Hand

    Common deformities of the hand in RA: Fusiform swelling: synovitis of PIP joints, causing them to appear spindle-shaped. Boutonnière deformity: flexion of the PIP and hyperextension of...

  • MSUS Hand

    Ultrasound of the Hand (Adapted According to Guidelines) Ultrasound of the Hand Video Channel on Vimeo Tumors and Nodules of the Hand Knuckle pads - a rare finding The rheumatic hand -...

  • Sickle cell dactylitis (Hand–foot syndrome)

    Hand–foot syndrome, or sickle cell dactylitis, is a problem in infants with sickle cell disease. Children present with acute pain and swelling diffusely in the fingers or toes, usually as a first...

  • Herpes labialis

  • Subkutane Knötchen

    SLE Rheumatisches Fieber Tophöse GichtMultizentrische Retikulohistiozytose Sarkoidose Vasculitis Juvenile Chronische ArthritisPanniculitis Limitierte SSc (Kalk) Erythema dodosumTyp II...

  • Knuckle Pads​ - Garrod's pads

    Knuckle pads, also called Garrod's pads or dorsal pads, are benign, asymptomatic, well-circumscribed, smooth, firm, skin-colored papules, nodules, or plaques (typically 0.5-3 cm diameter), located...

  • Acsessory Muscles

    Examples at the level of the wrist - Reversed palmaris longus (may provoce CTS) - Linburg Cumstock Deformity https://radiopaedia.org/articl... - Palmaris profundus (may provoce CTS)

  • MSUS FMH SAQM Guidelines

  • Trigger finger

    Trigger finger (also known as stenosing flexor tenosynovitis) is the term for a finger that cannot easily be extended from a flexed position. Severity ranges from a stiff finger or jerky finger...

  • Dermatomyositis

    Skin lesions: Raynaud's Panniculitis Livedo alopecia vesicular and/or bullous efflorescences calcinosis cutis non-specific erythroderma mechanic hands cuticular hypertrophy...

  • US Day - Sonoday - Ultrasound Day - Bianchi / Tamborrini

    The Ultrasound Day (US Day, Sonoday) is an annual one-day training course for advanced ultrasound specialists that has been in existence since 2005. From 2005 to 2010, Stefano Bianchi and Stefan...

  • Arachnodactyly

    The thumb sign, or Steinberg sign, is protrusion of the thumb past the hypothenar border when the hand is clenched in a fist The wrist sign, or Walker–Murdoch sign, is overlap of the fifth...

  • Anatomy

    Musculoskeletal System Anatomy: Anatomy Terms Anatomy Standards AnatomyTool Dissection Anatomieprogramm Bern (MorphoMed, German) e-learn.anatomy.uzh.ch Prometheus LernAtlas -...

  • Fascia - Faszie

    'ectoskeleton concept'. Fascia can be wrongly regarded as an unimportant packing, filling or wrapping tissue associated with other 'more important structures. Yet it is increasingly recognised that...

  • Remitting seronegative symmetrical synovitis with pitting edema (RS3PE)

    RS3PE is a type of benign seronegative polyarthritis that affects older people and is characterised by sudden onset of oedema and swelling of the dorsum of the hands with symmetrical polysynovitis...

  • Magnesium

    Every person should consume about 300 to 350 milligrams of magnesium daily. This amount is contained, for example, in 554 grams of wholemeal bread, 220 grams of oatmeal or 80 grams of sunflower...

  • UZR organized or supported Cadaver Courses

  • Acromegaly

    Acromegaly is a rare syndrome that occurs when the adenohypophysis secretes too much growth hormone (GH) even after the epiphyseal plates close during puberty. Arthropathy can be seen in up to 74%...

  • Enchondroma

    An enchondroma is a type of noncancerous bone tumor that begins in cartilage. Enchondromas are the most common, nonaggressive lesions of the hands. More than 50% of enchondromas occur in the...

  • Diabetes mellitus

    Common rheumatologic syndromes in patients with diabetes mellitus: Intrinsic complications of diabetes mellitus: Diabetic stiff hand syndrome (limited joint mobility syndrome, diabetic...

  • Wartenberg's Syndrome (Cheiralgia paresthetica)

    In 1932, Wartenberg described five cases of isolated neuropathy of the Superficial Radial Nerve (SRN) . He was so impressed by the similiarity to the isolated involvement of the lateral cutaneous...

  • Jaccoud arthropathy

    Jaccoud’s arthropathy is a chronic and non-erosive deforming arthropathy, usually affecting the hands characterized by ulnar deviation of the second to fifth fingers and subluxation of the...

  • Patients Toolbox & Information

    Useful Weblinks

  • Drug Therapy in Rheumatic Disease

    There are several categories of drugs that are used to treat many different rheumatic diseases. Classification: Disease-Modifying Antirheumatic Drugs (DMARDS) Nonsteroidal antiinflammatory...

  • Antisynthetase Syndrome (e.g. Jo-1)

    The antisynthetase syndrome is characterized by myositis, interstitial lung disease (ILD), arthritis, mechanic’s hands, and Raynaud’s phenomenon. This syndrome is seen in myositis...

  • Medical Society

    ACR American College of Rheumatology Assoziation für orthopädische Rheumatologie (German) BDI Berufsverband Deutscher Internisten e.V. (German) BSR British Society for Rheumatology...

  • MSUS - Musculoskeletal Ultrasound

    All about MSUS in the web

  • MSUS Injections

    MSUS ACADEMY BOOK - das Ultraschalllehrbuch des UZR in der 4. Ausgabe EULAR Points to Consider for the use of imaging to guide interventional procedures in patients with rheumatic and...

  • SLAP

    In a recent study, the MRI-diagnosed prevalence of SLAP tears in 53 asymptomatic patients aged 45 to 60 years was 55% to 72% High Prevalence of Superior Labral Tears Diagnosed by MRI in...

  • Arthritis

    Arthritis is inflammation of one or more joints. There are two major categories of arthritis. Monoarticular Arthritis Most common diagnoses in acute monoarticular arthritis: crystalline,...

  • SGR

    Schweizerische Gesellschaft für Rheumatologie (SGR) Swiss Society for Rheumatology (SGR)

  • Injection techniques

    Injection techniques UZR on VIMEO

  • Osteoarthritis

    Obesity is a modifiable risk factor most closely associated with osteoarthritis. The joints typically involved are among others: distal interphalangeal joints, proximal interphalangeal...

  • Tarif Tarmed Tardoc

    2023 Tarmed Rechnungsbeispiele Mitteilungen der Task Force Tarmed der SGUM Online-Tarifbrowser Direkter Link zum...

  • Alphavirus infections

    Mosquito-transmitted alphaviruses causing human rheumatic disease are globally distributed and include chikungunya virus, O’nyong-nyong virus, Ross River virus, Mayaro virus, Barmah Forest virus...

  • Injection techniques, Vessels and Nerves - Barcelona 2018 - Notes from the Faculty

    Here you find notes regarding the XI Sonoanatomy Course in Barcelona  Nerve histology and anatomy Vascularization of tendons and ligaments 3D US of feeding vessels of the hand Entrapment...

  • Kawasaki Disease

    Kawasaki disease (KD) is the most common vasculitis and cause of acquired heart disease in children. Consider KD in any child under the age of 5 years presenting with prolonged high fevers and...

  • SONAR

    What we do The Swiss Sonography in Arthritis and Rheumatism (SONAR) group was founded in 2008. The group has developed a semi-quantitative score for Rheumatoid Arthritis using modified OMERACT...

  • Diffuse idiopathic skeletal hyperostosis (DISH, Forestier's disease)

    DISH is frequently described (>10% in >50-year-olds) in older, asymptomatic patients at the axial skeleton as a radiologic incidental finding. Often, the criteria defined by Resnick 1976 are...

  • Quality in Rheumatology & Medicine - QRBB

    Qualität in der Rheumatologie & Medizin Der QRBB organisiert und moderiert Qualitätszirkel und Fortbildungen im Fachbereich Rheumatologie Ziele und Leitfaden des QRBB Hier gelangen...

  • Parvovirus B19

    Parvovirus B19 is a small, single-stranded, species-specific DNA virus that replicates in dividing cells and has a remarkable tropism for human erythroid progenitor cells. It is a pathogen...

  • Psoriatic arthritis

    Psoriatic arthritis is a polygenic disorder. HLA-Cw6 is associated with severe, early-onset skin psoriasis. HLA-B38 and HLA-B39 are associated with psoriatic arthritis and HLA-B27 is associated...

  • Wilson disease

    Common clinical presentations of Wilson disease:Owing to multiple genetic mutations of the ATP7B gene, the clinical presentations can be highly variable. The hepatic form presents before age 18...

  • Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA) - Treatment

    The treatment of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) has evolved dramatically during the past 30 years, perhaps more so than for any of the other rheumatic diseases.It is truly remarkable that...

  • Mixed Connective Tissue Disease (MCTD)

    MCTD was first described by Sharp and co-workers in 1972. It is an overlap syndrome characterized by a combination of manifestations similar to those seen in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE),...

  • Hypermobility Syndrome (Joint Hypermobility Syndrome)

    Hyperflexible joints are common and do not necessarily indicate that an individual has a Tensile Hereditary Connective Tissue Disease (see at the bottom). Joint hypermobility decreases with age...

  • Tenosynovial giant cell tumor (TGCT)

    TGCT exists in three forms: diffuse, localized, and localized TGCT of tendon sheath: Tenosynovial giant cell tumor (TGCT) of joints and tendon sheaths: diffuse type (also called pigmented...

  • Behçet’s Disease

    Hulusi Behçet, a Turkish dermatologist, in 1937 described a chronic relapsing syndrome of oral ulceration, genital ulceration, and uveitis that now bears his name. Behçet’s disease should...

  • Rheumatoide Arthritis (RA)

    RA is a chronic, systemic, inflammatory disorder. Its primary site of pathology is the synovium of the joints. The synovial tissues become inflamed and proliferate, forming pannus that invades bone,...

  • Spine

    The vertebral column consists of 33 vertebrae—7 cervical, 12 thoracic, 5 lumbar, 5 sacral , and 4 coccygeal vertebrae—and 23 intervertebral disks. The spinal column is composed of four balanced...

  • Complex Regional Pain Syndrome (CRPS)

    CRPS is a syndrome typically occurring in a single extremity following trauma and is characterized by allodynia, hyperalgesia, and vasomotor signs. A characteristic three-phase bone scan...

  • Inflammatory Muscle Disease

    Classification by Bohan and Peter: Adult polymyositis (PM) Adult dermatomyositis (DM) PM/DM associated with malignancy (12% of all myositis patients; 50% of myositis patients >age 65...