Knee Flashcards

1
Q

Assess AP knee image

  • (tibial plateau #?)
  • (patella?)
A
  • vertical line drawn down the lateral aspect of the lateral femoral condyle should not have more than 5mm of the lateral aspect of the lateral tibial condyle; if there is there could be a tibial plateau #
  • bipartite patella is common resulting from unfused ossification sites. Small unfused centre will be well corticaed. Normally located superiolaterally
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2
Q

Assess lateral knee image

  • (patella?)
  • (sesmoids?)
A
  • distance from tibial tubercle to apex of the patella should be the same size as the patella itself: if not, paterllar ligament could be ruptured
  • fabella is a common sesmoid bone in the gastrocnemius (can sit very laterally and seen on an AP, can also be bipartite)
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3
Q

NAME THE PATHOLOGY

sof tissue calcification adjacent to the medial femoral epicondlye

A
  • pellegrini-stieda lesion

- represents calcifcatio nof an old sprain of the medial collateral ligament

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4
Q

What is a lipohaemarthrosis?

A
  • a fat-fluid level seen on a lateral knee x-ray (HBL only)
  • effusion in the suprapatellar bursa containing fat released from the bone marrow sitting ontop of a blood fluid level
  • seeing a lipohaemarthrosis is indicative of a intra-articular #
  • black on top of white
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5
Q

Cruciate ligament injury

- (lateral capsular sign/segond #?)

A
  • rupture of a cruciate ligament is occassionally accompanied by a #
  • segond # is a small avulsion # of the lateral aspect of the tibial plateau = this has a strong association with a tear of the anterior cruciate ligament
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6
Q

Tibial plateau #

  • (evidence of an impacted #?)
  • (displacement?)
A
  • most involve the lateral plateau
  • usually seen as a depression from violent impaction of the lateral femoral condyle - car bumper #

Evidence of an imapcted #: area of increased denisty due to bone compression

The lateral tibial plateau may be displaced, use vertical guide - more than 5mm = displacement

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7
Q

Patella

- (violent contraction of quad?)

A
  • direct blow to the patella can cause a #, vertical, horizontal or comminuted
  • violent contractions of the quadricep can casue transverse # in athletes
  • certical # may not be seen on standard views, skyline may be required
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8
Q

Ostechondral # of an articular surface

A
  • a complication of patellar dislocation resulting from shearing or impaction
  • this involves the medial surface of the patella or the lateral femoral condyle
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9
Q
NAME THE PATHOLOGY
# of the proximal 1/3 of the fibula with associated with an unstable ankle #
A

maisonneuve ‘

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10
Q

AP knee positioning

A
  • patient is standing, back against the detector, leg is rotated either internally or externally until the patella sits centrally.
  • centre 1cm distal of the apex of the patella
  • collimate to include lateral skin margins, distal 1/3 of femur, proximal 1/3 of tib/fib
  • no grid
  • 60kVp 4mAs
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11
Q

Lateral knee positioning

A
  • patient turns so the affected side is closest to the board, affected knee is bent and central of the image detector, patient takes a step back with unaffected leg
  • femoral condyles should be superimposed
  • centre 1.5 cm distal of the apex of the patella, over the knee joint
  • no grid
  • 60kVp 4mAs
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12
Q

Horizontal beam lateral knee

A
  • patient lies supine, triangle pad placed under affected knee, IR placed between patients legs, facing affected knee.
  • tube is perpendicular to the detector, parallel to the floor
  • centre 1.5cm below apex of patella, or level of tibial tuberosity
  • 60kVp 4mAs
    ASSESS FOR LIOPHAEMARTHROSIS
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