wk 9- knee pain Flashcards

1
Q

knee pathology of bone

A

stress fracture of patella

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2
Q

knee pathology of soft tissue

A

patella tendinopathy

ITB friction syndrome

quad tendinopathy

infrapatella bursitis

fat pad impingement

os goods schlatters diease

bakers cyst

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3
Q

knee pathology of joint

A

patellofemoral pain

medial compartment OA

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4
Q

knee pathology of nerves

A

referred pain

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5
Q

patellofemoral pain syndrome

A

pain around or behind the patella in the absence of other pathologyies

can involve structures like
cartilage
bone
retinaculum
fat pad

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6
Q

what does the patella do during extension flexion

A

extension- patella sits laterally to trochlea
flexion -patella moves medially to lie withinintercondylar notch
130deg of flexion- moves laterally

movement is controlled by VMO and vastus lateralis and should stay within trochlea groove

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7
Q

when is PFJP aggrevated

A

squatting, walking up stairs, running, bounding, when the knee is flexed with load going through it

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8
Q

intrinsic and extrinisic risk factors of PFJP

A

ext:
1. GRF
2. surface/footwear
3. speed/mass
4. type of movement

intrin:
1. increased hip internal rotation
2. increased hip aduction
3.increased knee valgus
4. increased tibial external rotation
5. pronated foot type
6. lack of sagittal plane motions
7. inadequate flexibility of knee
8. trunk contralateral drop/anterior lean
9. patella positioning

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9
Q

key features of PFJP

A

onset during
running, steps/stairs, hills, weightbearing activities with knee flexion

vague pain

may click or have crepitus

quad contraction may be painful

restricted medial glide

functional testing: squats, stairs

taping should decrease pain

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10
Q

imaging for PFJP

A

x ray - skyline patella,knee 30eg flexion
CT
MRI

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11
Q

management options for PFJP

A
  1. rest
  2. exercise
    -Quads retraining: (contract VMO, palpating or taping for sensory feedback helps)
    -hip retraining: strengthen abductors, external rotations and extensors to control medial knee
    -strengthening and endurance to imrpove function and pain
  3. taping- reduces pain, helps activate VMO, positioning of patella- medial glide taping
  4. manual therapy
  5. foot orthoses- prefab
  6. bracing-maintains medial glide
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12
Q

patellar tendinopathy features

A

common in basketballers, long and high jumpers

onset during, change of direction, cutting and jumping activities

inferior pole of patella pain

no swelling, no clicking, no crepitus

normal ROM and movement

quad contraction painful

taping doesnt help

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13
Q

imaging for patella tendinopathy

A

US
MRI

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14
Q

management of patella tendinopathy

A
  1. deload/rest
  2. improve landing technique
  3. biomechical correction (ankle ROM, flexibility in hamstring, calf and quad, weakness of glutes, quad and cal)
  4. progressively load tendon with strength 4 stages protocol
    isometric 1 month
    isotonic 2 months
    energy storage 1 month
    energy storge and release 2 months
    sport specific 6 months of rehab point
  5. surgery - only if conservative failed

recovery can take between 3-6months or up to a year for long standing cases/return to sport

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15
Q

additional treamtent options for patella tendinopathy for biomechanical correction

A
  1. soft tissue therapy of quads, hammy and calf muscles
    -friction massage
    -myofascial release
    -trigger point
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16
Q

additional treatment options for patella tendinopathy

A
  1. ice
  2. injections
    - sclerosing injections with polidocanol
    -blood injection therapy
    CORTICOSTEROID NOT SUCCESSFUL
17
Q

medial compartment OA

A

most common MSK disorder

progressive loss of cartilage and joint space in medial compartment resulting in varus malalignment

18
Q

risk factors of OA

A
  1. BMI
  2. previous knee injury
  3. load distribution (increased knee adduction moment - longer moment arm which results in increased medial compression forces)
    eg lateral varus thrust
  4. genetics
19
Q

what foot orthotic additions can decrease the knee adduction moment

A

lateral wedge (valgus wedge)
lateral posting
lateral kirby skive

or
asics unloading shoe
bracing to redistribute load

20
Q

common lateral knee pathologies

A

ITB syndrome
lateral menisucus abnormality

21
Q

what not to miss on lateral knee pain

A

peroneal nerve injury
perthes disease
slipped capital femoral epiphysis

22
Q

ITBFS

A

overuse injury in runners, cyclists endurance athletes

increased compression of richly innervated and vascularised layer of fat and connective tissue that sepeartes ITB from lateral epicondyle

23
Q

ITBFS risk factors

A
  1. tibial internal rotation
  2. increase in hip adduction
  3. weakness in knee flexion/extension
24
Q

features of ITBFS

A

ache over lateral aspect of knee
aggrevated by running/cycling
tenderness over lateral femoral epicondyle (2-3cm) ABOVE LATERAL JOINT LINE

ober’s test

25
Q

managament of ITBFS

A
  1. activity modification
  2. ice, electrotherapy
  3. NSAIDs early on
  4. cortisone injection to reduce pain
  5. soft tissue massage, needling, triggering
    6.strength - single leg squats, abductors
  6. surgery
26
Q

what doesnt work on ITB

A

stretching

27
Q

pes anserinus tendinopathy/bursitis

A

sartorius, gracilis, semitendinosis tendons

primary action in knee flexion and resist valgus strain

often seen in swimmers, runners, cyclists with medial knee positions

28
Q
A