Lecture 12: Hip and Knee Joints Flashcards
What makes up the hip joint?
Femoral Head and Acetabulum of Pelvis
Ball and Socket
What three bones fuse to make up the acetabulum?
Ilium
Ischium
Pubis
What is the femur mostly covered with?
Articular Cartilage
Calcar Femorale
Where is this found?
What does it do?
- Location: Vertical plane of bone on posterior aspect of femur and is deep to lesser trochanter
- Function: Helps determine if fractures are stable of not
Iliofemoral Ligament
What are its attachments?
What does it do?
- Attachments: ASIS to the middle of greater and lesser trochanter of femur (B/t femur and ilium)
- Function: Prevents hyperextension of thigh
Strongest Hip Ligament
Pubofemoral Ligament
What are its attachments?
What does it do?
- Attachments: Superior pubic ramus to lesser trochanter of femur (B/t femur and pubis)
- Function: Prevents hyperabduction of thigh
Blends with Iliofemoral Ligament
Ischiofemoral Ligament
What are its attachments?
What does it do?
- Attachments: Lower part of Ischium to femoral neck
- Function: Limits internal rotation of hip
Weakest of all hip ligaments: why posterior hip injuries are most common
Ligamentum Teres (Ligament of Head of Femur)
What is its attachments?
What is its function?
- Attachments: Goes from the fovea of the head of the femur to the acetabulum
- Function: Holds head of the femur into the joint and provides blood supply
Acetabular Labrum
Where is it found?
What does it do?
- Location: Ring of cartilage that surrounds acetabulum on the rim
- Functoin: Deep pocket for the head of the femur
Anterior portion is most vulnerable when the labrum tears
Transverse Acetabular Ligament
What are its attachments?
What does it do?
- Location: Bridges Acetabular notch
- Function: Covers acetabular notch and prevents dislocation inferiorly
What artery supplies the acetabulum?
Anterior and Posterior Branch of Obturator Artery
What arteries supplies the head of the femur?
- Acetabular Branch of Obturator Artery
- Runs with Ligamentum Teres
-
Lateral Femoral Circumflex Artery (mostly anterior side)
- Ascending, Transverse, and Descending Branches
- Medial Femoral Circumflex Artery (mostly posterior side)
- Retinacular Arteries
What does Hilton’s Law state?
Nerves supplying muscles that diretly overly a joint also innervate that joint
What would you palpate on the hip?
Anterior
- Iliac Crest
- Greater Trochanter of Femur
- Pubic Tubercle
Posterior
- Iliac Crest
- PSIS
- Greater Trochanter
- Ischial Tuberosity
FADIR Test
How do you perform this test?
What does a positive test indicate?
- Flex hip to 90o
- Adduct
- Internally Rotate
Positive test (groin pain) indicates labral pathology/Femoroacetabular Impingement (FAI)