Monday, March 13, 2017

Cervical Spondylosis


Cervical spondylosis is a age related degeneration (wear and tear) of bones (vertebras) and discs (intervertebral disc) in the neck.


Symptoms ( What you will feel)
1. Pain in the neck
2. Stiffness, especially in the morning
3. Headaches
4. Numbness of the arm (Pins and Needles feelings)


Saturday, November 12, 2016



ބުރަކަށީގައި ރިއްސުން

ބޮޑެތި މީހުންގެ ތެރެއިން 80 އިންސައްތަ މީހުންނަށް، އެމީހުންގެ ދިރިއުޅުމުގެ ހަޔާތުގައި ބުރަކަށީގައި ރިއްސުން ތަޖުރިބާކުރެއެވެ. ބައެއް ފަހަރު މި ރިހުން ބުރަކަށީގެ ތިރިން ފައިބާ، އެއާއި ގުޅިފައިވާ ފައިގައި ރިއްސައި، އައްސިވެއެވެ.



ބުރަކަށީގައި ރިއްސާ ބައެއް ސަބަބުތައް

1.       ބުރަކަށީގެ މަސްތަކަށް ބާރުބޮޑުވުން

ބުރަކަށީގެ މަސްތަކަކީ މީހާގެ ހަޔާތުގައި އޭނާގެ ހަށިގަނޑަށް ބޭނުންވާ ވަރުގަދަކަމާއި ހެލިފެލިވުން ފޯރުކޮށްދޭ މަސްތަކެވެ. ބުރަކަށީގެ މަސްތަކަށް ބާރުބޮޑުވަނީ، އެ މަސްތައް މާ ބޮޑަށް ބޭނުންކުރެވުމުން، ނުވަތަ ބަލިކަށިވުމުންނެވެ. މިއީ ބުރަކަށީގައި ރިއްސުމަށް ދިމާވާ އެންމެ އާއްމު ސަބަބެވެ.

2.     ލިގަމެންޓު(އެއް ކަށި އަނެއް ކަށްޓާ ގުޅުވައިދޭ މަސް)ތަކަށް ބާރުބޮޑުވުން

ލިގަމެންޓުތަކަކީ ބުރަކަށީގެ އެއް ކަށި އަނެއް ކަށްޓާ ގުޅުވައިދީ، އެއް ބަދަ އަނެއް ބަދަޔާއި ކަސިޔާރުވިޔަނުދީ ހިފަހައްޓާ މަސްތަކެކެވެ. ލިގަމެންޓަށް ހާނިއްކަވާ މައިގަނޑު 2 ސަބަބަކީ ބުރަކައްޓަށް ގެނެވޭ ކުއްލި ހަރަކާތަކުން، ނުވަތަ ދިގުދެމިގެންދާ ގޮތަކަށް ބުރަކަށީގެ ލިގަމެންޓުތައް ބޭނުންކުރުމެވެ.

3.     ހެލިފެލިވެ އުޅުމުގައި ބުރަކަށި ބަހައްޓަންޖެހޭ ގޮތަށް ނުބެހެއްޓުން

ހެލިފެލިވެ އުޅުމުގައި ބުރަކަށި ބަހައްޓަންޖެހޭ ގޮތަށް ނުބެހެއްޓުމުގެ ސަބަބުން، މަސްގަނޑު ވަރުބަލިވެ، ހުޅުތައް ފިތި، ބަދަތަކުގެ ދެމެދުގައިވާ ޑިސްކުތަކަށް (ލޮނދިފަށަލަ) ބާރު ބޮޑުވާ ގޮތްވެއެވެ.

4.     އުމުރު

އުމުރުން ދުވަސްވުމުގެ ސަބަބުންނާއި، ވިރާސީ ގޮތުން ވާރުތަވާ ކަންކަމުގެ ސަބަބުން، ބުރަކަށީގެ ބަދަތަކުގެ ދެމެދުގައިވާ ލޮނދީގެ ފަށަލަ ހަލާކުވުމާއި (ޑިޖެނެރެޓިވް ޑިސްކް ޑިސީސް)، ހުޅުތައް ހަލާކުވުން (ޑިޖެނެރެޓިވް ޖޮއިންޓް ޑިސީސް) މެދުވެރިވެއެވެ. 

5.     ލޮނދިފަށަލަ ބޭރަށް ޖެހުން/ނުކުތުން

ލޮނދިފަށަލަ ބޭރަށް ޖެހުމުން/ނުކުތުމުން، މައިބަދައިގެ މައިނާރުން ކަފިވެގެން ނުކުންނަ ނާރުތަކަށް ބާރުބޮޑުވެ، ފަޔަށް ތަދެއް ފައިބާފަދަ އިހުސާސެއް ކުރެވެއެވެ.

6.     އެހެނިހެން ސަބަބުތައް

·         ކުޑަކަމުދާ ނިޒާމުގެ ބަލިތައް (ބްލެޑަރ/ކިޑްނީގެ ބަލިތައް)

·         އަންހެނުންގެ ޚާއްޞަ ބަލިތައް (އެންޑޮމެޓްރިއޯސިސް، ރަހިމުގެ މައްސަލަތައް)

·         ކެންސަރުބަލި

ބުރަކަށީގެ ރިއްސުމުގެ ފަރުވާ

1.       އަރާމުކުރުން

ބުރަ މަސައްކަތް ކުރުމުން ދުރުހެލިވާންވާނެއެވެ. މީގެ އިތުރުން، ގިނަ ވަގުތު އިށީނދެ އިނުން، އެއްގަމު އުޅަނދުފަހަރު ދުއްވުން، ގުދުވުމާއި، ބަރު އެއްޗެހި އުފުލުމުން ދުރުހެލިވާންވާނެއެވެ.

2.     ތަދުކަނޑުވާ ބޭސް ބޭނުންކުރުން

3.     ގަވާއިދުން ކަސްރަތުކުރުން

4.     ހިނގާ ބިންގާވެ އުޅުމުގައި/ނިދުމުގައި/އިށީނދެ އިނުމުގައި ބުރަކަށި ބަހައްޓަންޖެހޭ ގޮތަށް ބެހެއްޓުން

5.     ފިޒިއޮތެރަޕީ

6.     އޮޕަރޭޝަން ކުރުން (އިސްވެ ބަޔާންކުރެވުނު ކަންކަމުން ބުރަކަށީގެ ރިއްސުން ހައްލުނުވާނަމަ)

Knee Osteoarthritis - Exercises

Knee Osteoarthritis - Exercises

            In the management of knee osteo-arthritis exercises play a major role.It relives pain, reduce stiffness and strengths surrounding muscles.

                  These are some exercises you can do at home or in the work place  




 

 

                                                               Before and After Exercise

Put a moist-heat pack on your arthritic knee for 20 minutes before you start exercising. If you take pain medications, try taking them about 45 minutes before you exercise. This reduces pain during exercises.








Thursday, November 10, 2016


Capture
އޮސްޓިއޯއާތްރައިޓިސް
 


އެހެން ހުޅުތަކެކޭ އެއްފަދައިން ކަކޫ ހުޅުވެސް އުފެދިފައިވަނީ ދެ ހަރުކަށިން

އެދެ ހަރުކަށީގެ ދޭތެރޭގައި މަޑުކަށީގެ(ކާޓިލެޖް)  ފަށަލައެއްވޭ

އޮސްޓިއޯއާތްރައިޓިސްގައި މަޑުކައްޓަށް ގެއްލުންވެ، ހަރުކަށި އެއްކަށި އަނެއްކަށްޓާއި ގޭނި، ތަދު އިޙްސާސްކުރެވޭ

މީގެއިތުރުން ހުޅުވަށައިގެންވާ ފަށަލައާއި، ދެކަށިގުޅުވައިދޭ މަސްތަކާއި، ވަށައިގެންވާ ކަށިތަކަށް ގެއްލުންވޭ

އޮސްޓިއޯއާތްރައިޓިސް ގެ ސަބަބުން ލިބޭ ގެއްލުން އަލުން އިއާދަ ކުރެވޭ ވަރުގެ ފަރުވާއެއް ހޯދިފައެއް އަދި ނެތް





އޮސްޓިއޯއާތްރައިޓިސް ޖެހެން ދިމާވާ ސަބަބުތައް

އާދަޔާ ޙިލާފަށް ފަލަވުން

ވިރާސީގޮތުން

އުމުރުން ދުވަސްވުން

ފަންސާސް އަހަރުން މަތީގެ އަންހެނުން

ކުރިން ކަކުލަށް ހާނިކަ ވެފައިވާ މީހުން

ތަކުރާރުކޮށް ކަކުލަށް ބުރަވާ މަސައްކަތް/ ކުޅިވަރު ކުޅުން



އޮސްޓިއޯއާތްރައިޓިސްގެ އަލާމާތްތައް

ތަދުވުން

ކަކޫހުޅު ހަރުވުން

މަސްގަނޑު ބަލިކަށިވުން

ކަކޫ ހުޅު އައިބުވުން

ކަކޫހުޅު ހަރަކާތް ކުރެވޭ މިންވަރު ދަށްވުން 

ކަކުލު ހުޅުން އަޑުއަޑު ގޮވުން



އޮސްޓިއޯއާތްރައިޓިސް ދެނެގަންނަ ގޮތް

ޑޮކްޓަރުގެ ބަލާބެލުމުން ( ފިތީމަ ތަދުވާމިންވަރު، ދުޅަވުން، އައިބުވެފައިވުން، މަސްގަނޑުގެ ވަރު ހުރި މިންވަރު، ކަކޫ ހުޅު ލެނބީމާ އިވޭ އަޑުތަކުން)

ކަކޫހުޅުގެ އެކްސް-ރޭ



އޮސްޓިއޯއާތްރައިޓިސްއަށް ދެވޭ ފަރުވާ

ތަދުކަނޑުވަ ބޭސް ބޭނުންކުރުމާއި އުނގުޅުން

ހޫނުފެނުން ނުވަތަ ފިނިފެނުން ބޮނޑިތާން ކުރުން

ބަރުދަން ލުއިކުރުން

ކަކޫހުޅުގެ މަސްގަނޑު ވަރުގަދަ ކުރާ ކަސްރަތު ކުރުން

ކަކުލަށް ބާރުދޭ ބެލްޓެއް ބޭނުންކުރުން، ހިނގާ ދަނޑިގަނޑެއް ބޭނުންކުރުން، ފައިވާންގެ ތެރެއަށް ސަޕޯޓެއް ލެއްވުން

 ކަކޫހުޅަށް ބޭނުންވާ މާއްދާ އެކުލެވޭ ބޭސް ބޭނުންކުރުން ( ކެލްސިއަމް، ވިތަމިން ޑީ، ގްލުކޮސްއަމިން، އޮމެގާ 3 ފެޓީއެސިޑްސް)

ކަކޫހުޅު އެތެރެއަށް "ޖެލް"އެއް އިންޖެކްޓް ކުރުން

ހުޅުބަދަލްކުރާ ސާރޖަރީ ކުރުން







ޑޮކްޓަރ. އެންޓަން ޕްރިޔަންތާ ވަރްނަކުލަސޫރިޔާ

އެމް.ބީ.ބީ.އެސް.، އެމް.އެސް

ކަށީގެ އޮޕާރޭޝަނަށް ޙާއްސަ ޑޮކްޓަރ

އޭޑީކޭ ހޮސްޕިޓަލް،މާލެ، ދިވެހިރާއްޖެ.


Thursday, November 3, 2016

BACK PAIN

 Eighty percent of adults will experience low back pain sometime during their lifetime. Sometimes back pain may radiate to lower limbs and associated with numbness of legs.


COMMON CAUSES

Muscle strains. 

The muscles of the low back provide the strength and mobility for all activities of daily living. Strains occur when a muscle is overworked or weak. This is the most common cause for back pain

Ligament sprain.

 Ligaments connect the bones of the spine and provide stability. They can be injured with a sudden, forceful movement or prolonged stress.

Poor posture.

 Poor posture creates muscular fatigue, joint compression, and stresses the discs which lies between back bones.

Age.

 “Wear and tear” and inherited factors may cause degenerative changes in the discs (called degenerative disc disease), and degeneration of the joints of the spine (called degenerative joint disease).

Disc bulge or prolapse

 Can cause pressure on nerves, which can radiate pain down the leg.

Other causes 

Bladder/kidney infection, endometriosis, cancer, or ovarian problems.


TREATMENT

REST: Rest from aggravating activity. Avoid prolonged sitting, driving, bending, heavy lifting and twisting.

PAIN RELIVING MEDICATIONS

EARLY EXERCISE: Gentle exercise for mobility and stretching

CORRECT POSITIONING-while walking, sleeping and sitting


PHYSIOTHERAPY

Monday, October 31, 2016

GOUT 

                             
                  

                                                                    

Gout is a painful form of arthritis that can affect toe, foot, ankle, knee, hand and elbow joints.  Symptoms include pain, swelling and shiny redness over the affected joints.   Treatment of acute gout attacks is designed to relieve pain and inflammation, primarily through medication.  Diet and other lifestyle changes can help prevent future attacks.


GENERAL INFORMATION
Gout is a painful form of arthritis (inflammation of the joints). It is sometimes referred to as gouty arthritis.  The most common place for gout to develop is the big toe; however the joints of the feet, ankles, knees, hands and elbows can also be affected.  It is unusual for gout to affect more than one or two joints at a time.

  The prevalence of the gout is 0.2% in developed countries. Gout most commonly affects adult men  and is uncommon in women until after menopause, male to female ratio 10:1.





CAUSES
Gout is caused by raised levels of uric acid in the blood (hyperuricaemia).  Uric acid is produced naturally in the body.  Normally it stays dissolved in the blood and is excreted by the kidneys as a component of urine.

Under-excretion or over-production of uric acid by the body can cause levels in the blood to be raised. When this occurs, crystals of uric acid can form and deposit in the joints causing gout.  However, not all people with raised uric acid levels in their blood will develop gout.



                                                           Crystals  deposition in gout

A number of risk factors are related to the development of gout. These include:

  • Obesity
  • High alcohol intake
  • A genetic predisposition
  • High intake of foods rich in purines (eg: some seafoods and some meat)
  • Certain medicines eg: diuretics (fluid tablets)
  • Injury to a joint
  • Long-standing kidney disease.
Occasionally there is no obvious cause for an attack of gout.


SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
Gout develops over short period of time . Signs and symptoms of a gout attack include:

  • Severe pain and tenderness in the affected joint
  • Swelling of the affected joint
  • The skin over the joint may feel hot and tight and may look shiny and red.
Some people may also experience nausea, a loss of appetite and a slight fever.


DIAGNOSIS
Gout can be difficult to diagnose because the symptoms may mimic those of other conditions such as joint infection.  In order to make an accurate diagnosis need to examine the affected joint and take a full medical history. They will assess the nature and duration of the symptoms experienced.  A blood test to check for alterations in normal blood levels and a raised uric acid level will also be taken.  Results of this test may not always be helpful, however, as they often indicate normal uric acid levels during an attack of gout.  This is likely to be because the excess uric acid has moved out of the blood and has settled as crystals in the joints.

In order to make a definitive diagnosis of gout the doctor may take a sample of fluid from the affected joint. This is performed using a local anaesthetic and involves inserting a needle inserted into the affected joint and removing a small amount of fluid. The fluid is then sent to a laboratory where it is tested for the presence of uric acid crystals.  If they are present, then gout is confirmed.  X-rays of the affected area may also be taken to check for joint damage.


TREATMENT AND DIET
Medical treatment is aimed at relieving the pain and inflammation of acute attacks and preventing the occurrence of future attacks.

Without treatment it may take up to a week for symptoms of a gout attack to subside.  Attacks of gout can recur. At first the time period between attacks can be as long as several months or even years.  However over time attacks tend to occur more frequently and tend to be more severe.





TREATMENT OF ACUTE ATTACKS


 ANTI-INFLAMMATORY MEDICATIONS
Particularly non-steroidal anti-inflammatory medications (NSAIDs) such as indomethacin, naprosyn or diclofenac. Taken early in the attack NSAID's can reduce the duration and severity of the attack. 
 Paracetamol taken in conjunction with other medications can help in reducing pain. Aspirin should be avoided as it can reduce the amount of uric acid excreted by the body. 

COLCHICINE
This medication helps to block production of uric acid. It is most effective when taken early in an attack.  However, it can have side effects such as diarrhoea if too much is taken.
STEROIDS
Such as prednisone may be given in tablet form to help reduce pain and inflammation.  Steroid injections directly into the joint may also be effective. 
DRINKING EXTRA FLUID
 Adequate amount of water while taking these medications is recommended.

PREVENTING OF FUTURE ATTACKS

Preventing attacks of gout is as important as treating the symptoms of an acute attack. Ways in which gout can be prevented include

 MEDICATIONS
 The mainstay drug for people with gout is allopurinol which acts to reduce uric acid production. People who cannot take allopurinol because of side effects will usually be prescribed probenecid instead, which acts to increase the excretion of uric acid by the kidneys. Other medicines that may be prescribed in certain circumstances are benzbromarone and febuxostat. In the initial stages of treatment with medications to prevent gout, attacks may occur more frequently and may be more severe. For this reason the dosage of the medications may be low to start with, and is then gradually increased.



DIETARY MODIFICATIONS

Are aimed at restricting or avoiding foods high in purines.  Purines are substances found in some foods and produce uric acid when broken down by the body.  Foods high in purines include

  

                 







       Foods to be avoided in gout
  • Shellfish (pipis, paua, oysters, mussels) and fish roe
  • Offal foods (brains, liver, kidney, tripe)
  • Red meat (beef, pork/bacon, lamb)
  • Yeast extracts (Marmite, Vegemite)
  • Foods containing yeast (bread, beer)
  • Oily fish (sardines, herrings and anchovies).

LIMITING ALCOHOL INTAKE

 is also important.  Alcohol causes the body to lose fluid (by increasing urine output and drawing water from the blood), thus increasing the uric acid concentrations in the blood.  Beer is rich in purines so should be avoided.


DRINKING PLENTY OF NON-ALCOHOLIC FLUIDS

 Eight to ten glasses a day is recommended.  This will help to flush the uric acid crystals out of the body.


MAINTAINING A HEALTHY BODY WEIGHT

 Will help to reduce stress on affected joints and decrease the likelihood of developing gout.


COMPLICATIONS
If uric acid levels remain raised for long periods of time, or there are frequent, recurrent attacks of gout, deposits of uric acid salts may appear around the affected joint. These are called tophi and appear as chalky coloured nodules. Tophi may also appear in other areas of the body such as the ears.

Recurrent severe attacks of gout and the development of tophi can cause permanent damage to the joints.  Surgery may be required to restore joint function.  This may involve joint replacement surgery.

Damage to the delicate filters within the kidneys and the development of kidney stones can also occur if uric acid levels in the blood remain raised for long periods of time.  This in turn can impair kidney function.


                         
   ds of time.  This in turn can                                                                                     

In order to prevent the complications of gout it is important to treat gout attacks quickly and prevent gout attacks recurring by adopting the measures outlined above.  It is also important to carefully follow the treatment instructions given by a doctor.