L9.1 Knee Complex Flashcards
1
Q
Knee complex
A
- Patellofemoral & tibiofibular joint (compound)
- Capsule, syno membrane, bursae, lig, menisci
2
Q
Knee Joint
A
- Tibiofemoral → a modified hinge joint (complex)
- Patellofemoral
- F/E & some rotation
- Most stable in E
3
Q
Tibiofemerol joint
A
- Directly weight bearing
- Poor bony congruence - corrected by menisci (works similar to a labrum)
- Articular capsule → extensive, attached at articular margins & menisci
- Deficiencies:
- ANT: Suprapatellar bursa
- POS: Popliteal tendon
- Deficiencies:
4
Q
What is the knee joint reinforced by?
A
- ANT: Patellar lig & retinaculae
- POS: Oblique & Arcuate popliteal lig
- MED: Medial collateral lig
- LAT: ITB
- INF: Coronary lig
- Also supported by muscles
5
Q
Synovial membrane
A
- Largest synovial membrane encapsulating in the body, lines interior joint capsules
- Reflects onto ACL/PCL & popliteal tendon
- Goes ANT and becomes suprapatellar bursae
6
Q
Bursae
A
- (Subcutaneous patellar bursa (may be inflamed from scrubbing floors), deep infrapatellar bursa, Subcutaneous infrapatellar bursa)
- Minimises friction
- May communicate with suprapatellar/popliteus/semimembranosus bursae
- *May have spread of bursitis
7
Q
Collateral ligaments
A
- Collateral (Taut in E)
- MED (tibial): Condyle of femur → condyle of tibia on ANT shaft (SUP); medial menisucus (DEEP)
- Wide, from POS → ANT
- Resists AB & ER
- LAT (fibular):
- Shorter
- Separated from LAT meniscus by popliteal tendon
- Resists ADD
- Not as commonly injured
- MED (tibial): Condyle of femur → condyle of tibia on ANT shaft (SUP); medial menisucus (DEEP)
8
Q
Cruciate ligaments
A
Intracapsular but extrasynovial; Allows rotation & stabilisation in A-P direction
- ANT:
- Intercondylar eminence → inner LAT condyle of femur
- Tightens & Untwists in E
- Assists in IR & contributes to locking of knee
- Prevents backwards displacement of femur in WB position & fwd displacement of tibia in NWB position
- Most prone to injury in hyperextension/flexed & rotated knee
- POS:
- POS tibia → MED condyle of femur
- Taut in full flexion
- Opposite action of ACL
- Prone to injury in flexed knee (bumper bar impact)
9
Q
Other ligaments
A
- Oblique popliteal lig
- Arcuate popliteal (thickening of capsule)
- Transverse genicular lig (contact menisci anteriorly)
10
Q
Menisci
A
- Separates knee joint into 2 compartments → allows separate movements
- Moves with femur in rotation/tibia in F/E
- ↑congruency & stabilises knee
- ↑contact area by ~1/3
- Spread syno fluids, bears weight, protect articular surfaces
- LAT → separated by popliteal tendon
- MED → commonly injured (longer, horns further apart, less mobile due to MCL attachments)
- Removal leads to incidence of osteoarthritis (results from bone rubbing on bone)
- Moves with femur in rotation, with tibia in F/E
11
Q
Knee locking
A
- MED condyles longer than LAT (which is more ANT projected)
- LAT is shorter and fits quicker, MED more oblique, rotate → lock knee
- WB: FEMUR IR into fixed tibia
- NWB: TIBIA ER into fixed femur
- Popliteus → unlocking muscle
- Draws LAT femoral condyle POS
- LAT is shorter and fits quicker, MED more oblique, rotate → lock knee
12
Q
ANT draw test?
A
- ANT draw test: Femur kept stable → move leg ANT easily → ACL torn
- *same test but opposite for PCL
13
Q
Blood & Nerve supply?
A
- Blood supply: Anastomoses b/w branches of femoral, popliteal & genicular A
- Nerve supply: Branches of obturator, femoral & sciatic
14
Q
What is conjunct/adjunct rotation?
A
- Conjunct rotation:
- locking (passive): femur rotates internally relative to fixed tibia
- Unlocking (active): popliteus pulling on LAT epicondyle → LAT rotation
- Adjunct rotation:
- Discrete actions occurring
- IR/ER with flexed knee
15
Q
Genu varum/valgum?
A
- Genu Varum → Bowl legged position
- Genu valgum → knocked knee position