Knee Problems Flashcards
5 acute knee injuries
- Fracture
- Acute on chronic degenerative joint disease
- Meniscal injury
- Ligament injury
- Tendon injury
Hx for an acute knee injury
- Where did it happen (sport/recreation or work place)
- Activity (sports tackle, jumping)
- Energy (how fast + how heavy)
- Systemic symptoms
- Chronology (quick/slow onset, previous injury or event)
- Hear/feel pop/crack
- Swelling (early/late)
Early swelling after an acute knee injury suggests what
Haemarthrosis
Presentation of a meniscal injury
- Twisting movement on a loaded fixed knee
- Painful “squelch”
- Slow swelling (quicker in young)
- Painful to weight bear
- “Locked” knee
Presentation of ACL tear
- Forward momentum, leg fixed +/- rotation
- “Pop”
- Quick swelling
- Often able to bear weight
Collateral tears
- Lateralised pain
- Feel of “crack”, sharp pain
- No or minimal effusion
- Bruising to 1 side
How to examine an acute knee injury
Look, feel, move
Look for:
- Scars, bruising, swelling
- Joint irregularity
Feel for:
- Effusion
- Crepitus
- Heat or tenderness
- Tissue lumps or defects
Move
- Passive + active
- Straight leg raise
- ROM
- Ligament testing
- Dynamic testing
Investigations for acute knee injuries
- X-rays
- US
- MRI
What 6 things can be seen on x-rays of acute knee injuries
- Fracture
- Loose bodies
- Ligament avulsion
- Lipohaemarthrosis
- Osteochondral defect
- Degenerative joint disease
What 4 things can be seen on US of acute knee injuries
- Tendon rupture
- Some meniscal tears
- Swelling
- Cysts
Indications for surgical Rx of acute knee problems
- Failure of conservative Rx
- Work/sport demands
- Problems with daily activities
- Prevention of falls or further joint injury
Non-surgical Rx of acute knee injuries
- Physiotherapy
- Analgesia
- Swelling reduction
Aims of non-surgical Rx of acute knee injuries
-Restoration of function, ROM swelling reduction
Rx for meniscal tears
- Meniscal repair
- Partial meniscectomy
- Meniscal transplantation
What decides whether meniscal repair will be open or arthroscopic
- How deep they are i.e. how accessible
- >3/4mm deep seems to be where open becomes arthroscopic