ONE Knee and Foot Flashcards

1
Q

Valgus/Varus Stress Tests

A

Valgus stress test
• Medial collateral ligament
• Compare bilaterally
• Supine. Legs extended
• Hand – lateral knee and medial malleolus • Medial/lateral pressure
• + pain without laxity – collateral ligament
• + pain with laxity – collateral & cruciate ligament
• Supine. Knee flexed 30
• + pain without laxity – grade 1 collateral sprain • + pain with laxity – grade 2 collateral sprain

Varus stress test
• Lateral collateral ligament
• Compare bilaterally
• Supine. Legs extended
• Hand – medial knee and lateral malleolus • Medial/lateral pressure
• + pain without laxity – collateral ligament
• + pain with laxity – collateral & cruciate ligament
• Supine. Knee flexed 30
• + pain without laxity – grade 1 collateral sprain • + pain with laxity – grade 2 collateral sprain

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2
Q

Drawer Sign

A
Drawer Sign
• +5 mm of tibial movement on the femur • Injury or tear
• Anterior cruciate ligament
• Posterolateral capsule
• Posteromedial capsule
• Medial collateral ligament (more than 1cm movement) • Iliotibial band
• Posterior oblique ligament
• Arcuate-popliteus complex
Anterior Drawer Sign
• Anterior Cruciate ligament
• Procedure: Patient supine
• Flex the leg and place the foot on the table • Sit or stabilize foot
• Grasp behind the knee
• Check Hamstring tendons must be relaxed • Pull on the leg
• Compare bilaterally
• +5 mm of tibial movement on the femur
Posterior Drawer Sign
• Posterior cruciate ligament
• Same position as Anterior Drawer Test with hands at xiyan/dubi • Push
• Grade 1 injury – movement 1mm-5mm
• Grade 2 injury – movement 5mm-10mm
• Grade 3 injury – movement 10mm+ • Posterior cruciate ligament
• Arcuate-popliteus complex
• Posterior oblique ligament
• Anterior cruciate ligament
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3
Q

Slocum Test

A

Usually the wrong answer

Slocum Test
• Anterior Cruciate Ligament
• Patient sits with legs handing off table
• Hand behind proximal tibia – anterior force • Hand ankle – stabilize
• Repeat internal/external rotated
• + Tibia moves anteriorly

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4
Q

Hughston’s Palpation of Knee Joint Line for tenderness/Mc Murray Test

A

Medio patellar Plica Test (synovial tissue folds) • Supine. Flex knee 30
• Push patellar lateral→medial
• While palpating medial patella
• Medial synovial plica moves between patella and patellar groove • + Pain medial knee

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5
Q

Anterior Drawer Test

A

Ankle stability,
anterior talofibular ligament is most injured ligament on foot**

  • Supine
  • Stabilize distal tibia anteriorly
  • Grasp calcaneus
  • Traction in direction of anterior talofibular ligament • + increased mobility, laxity
  • Compare bilaterally
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6
Q

Talar Tilt

A

Calcaneofibular Stability
• Supine
• Grasp calcaneus. Plantar surface of foot to chest • Open calcaneofibular joint
• +increased mobility, laxity

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7
Q

Morton’s Test

A

Fibrous adhesions (scar tissue) that have built up on the medial plantar nerve due to trauma and repetitive motion.

for Morton’s Neuroma, metatarsal stress fracture
• Compress ub66→SP3
• +numbness, paresthesia
• Compress local intermetatarsal space
• + Pain on metatarsal without paresthesia – stress fracture

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8
Q

Apley’s compression

A
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9
Q

Mc Murray’s

A

Figure four,
grind knee into joint,
feel for meniscus tear

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10
Q

Plantar fascitis test

A

Windlass test

dorsiflex toes

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11
Q

which is worse in morning, which is worse after walking?

A

plantar fascitis

mortons neuroma

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