2025 questions

Question 1 of 48

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Orthopedic Urgent Care 2

At the completion of the Urgent Care Orthopedic Essentials II PAs should have a better understanding of the diagnosis and treatment of benign tumors of the hand, forearm fractures, sternal fractures, right hip fractures, elbow stiffness after fracture, arthritis of the foot and ankle, management of partial and full thickness rotator cuff tears, lumbar spine arthritis, shoulder instability, symptomatic osteochondromas, fractures of the humerus, fractures of the foot and ankle, cause of pain in the hand and wrist, fractures of the coracoid, lateral and medial elbow tendinitis, tendinitis around the knee, finger dislocations, fractures of the cervical spine, complications of finger fractures, foot drop, management of foreign bodies, mallet fingers, causes of hip pain, ligament injuries of the hand and wrist, and deformities of the fingers.

Question 1
An 80 year old female presents to your office with a left ring finger deformity after a fall one week ago. She initially went to urgent care and xrays were unremarkable for a fracture (Figures 1 and 2). A photo of her left ring finger is shown in figure 3. On physical exam the left ring finger is in hyperextension at the PIP joint and flexion at the DIP joint. She able to flex her PIP joint with full motion. What is the best treatment option?