Early triage of a patient with metastatic melanoma presenting as mechanical knee pain - a case report.

IF 1.6 Q2 REHABILITATION Journal of Manual & Manipulative Therapy Pub Date : 2023-08-01 Epub Date: 2023-03-03 DOI:10.1080/10669817.2023.2183338
Rohil Chauhan, William Boissonnault, Nicholas Gormack, Steven White
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Abstract

Physical therapists (PTs) working in primary care settings commonly encounter mechanical causes of knee pain. Non-mechanical causes of knee pain, such as bone tumors, are rare, and therefore, PTs often have a low index of suspicion regarding sinister pathology. The purpose of this case report is to describe the physical therapist's clinical reasoning process for a 33-year-old female presenting with medial knee pain and a subsequent history of metastatic melanoma. Initially, subjective and objective testing pointed to a mechanical internal derangement of the knee. However, symptom progression and poor treatment responses between physical therapy visits 2 and 3 raised suspicions as to the cause of the knee pain. This prompted an orthopedic referral and medical imaging, revealing a large bone tumor invading the medial femoral condyle, which was further characterized as metastatic melanoma by a specialty oncology team. Further imaging revealed several metastatic subcutaneous, intramuscular and cerebral lesions. This case highlights the importance of the ongoing medical screening process, including the monitoring of symptoms and treatment responses.

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对表现为膝关节机械性疼痛的转移性黑色素瘤患者进行早期分诊--病例报告。
在基层医疗机构工作的物理治疗师(PT)通常会遇到机械性原因引起的膝关节疼痛。非机械性原因引起的膝关节疼痛(如骨肿瘤)很少见,因此,物理治疗师通常对险恶病理的怀疑指数较低。本病例报告旨在描述物理治疗师对一名 33 岁女性膝关节内侧疼痛和随后的转移性黑色素瘤病史的临床推理过程。起初,主观和客观测试均显示膝关节存在机械性内部损伤。然而,在第 2 次和第 3 次物理治疗期间,症状加重且治疗效果不佳,这让人怀疑膝关节疼痛的原因。骨科转诊和医学影像检查发现,股骨内侧髁上有一个巨大的骨肿瘤,肿瘤专科团队进一步将其定性为转移性黑色素瘤。进一步的影像学检查发现了几个转移性皮下、肌肉内和脑部病灶。这个病例突出了持续医疗筛查过程的重要性,包括监测症状和治疗反应。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.50
自引率
20.00%
发文量
55
期刊介绍: The Journal of Manual & Manipulative Therapy is an international peer-reviewed journal dedicated to the publication of original research, case reports, and reviews of the literature that contribute to the advancement of knowledge in the field of manual therapy, clinical research, therapeutic practice, and academic training. In addition, each issue features an editorial written by the editor or a guest editor, media reviews, thesis reviews, and abstracts of current literature. Areas of interest include: •Thrust and non-thrust manipulation •Neurodynamic assessment and treatment •Diagnostic accuracy and classification •Manual therapy-related interventions •Clinical decision-making processes •Understanding clinimetrics for the clinician
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