Knee Ligament injury and rehab Flashcards

1
Q

What does the MCL restrain

A
  • 1ºrestrain: valgus
  • 2ºrestrain: hyperextension and tibial rotation
  • more slack in flexion and taut in extension
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2
Q

What does the LCL restrain

A
  • primary restrain = varus
  • secondary restraint = hyperextension and rotation
  • slack on flexion and taut in extension
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3
Q

ACL attachments

A
  • anterior intercondylar area of tibial plateau
  • runs in a posterior lateral direction
  • medial side of the lateral femoral condyle
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4
Q

What does the ACL limit

A
  • anterior translation of the tibia on the femur (OC)
  • posterior translation of the femur on the tibia
  • secondary restrains varus and valgus forces as well as ER
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5
Q

How do the ACL fibers react during flexion and extension

A
  • anterior medial fibers are taut in flexion
  • posterior-lateral fibers taut in extension
  • anterior shear/tension in open chain extension
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6
Q

PCL attachements

A
  • posterior tibia plateau to the lateral side of the medial femoral condyle
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7
Q

What does the PCL limit

A
  • limits posterior translation of the tibia on the femur
  • anterior translation of the femur on the tibia
  • secondary restrains = rotation, varus, and valgus
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8
Q

Joint capsule of the Tibiofemoral joint

A
  • secondary restrain in all directions
  • a completely torn ACL –> joint capsule will take up slack as well as MCL/LCL/PCL
  • therefore do not want to do activities that will stretch
  • intracapsular/extra synovial
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9
Q

Mechanism of injury common in the knee

A
  • Valgus/ER/Flexion - Likely to injure MCL, ACL, Medial Meniscus (possibly lateral meniscus)
  • Hyperextension: likely to injure the ACL in a non contact mechanism (common with female jumping athletes)
  • Forced tibial ER: torn ACL
  • Forced tibial IR: ACL wraps around PCL (can tear)
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10
Q

ACL tears common signs and symptoms

A
  • Acute blow or twisting injury
  • immediate effusion (bleeding into the joint)
  • inability to continue to play
  • 75% chance ACL injury diagnosis on history alone
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11
Q

Describe an torn ligament in relation to the stress strain curve

A
  • stretch into plastic
  • 4% strain = microtrauma
  • 6-8% = 1º-2º strain
  • > 8% = 3ºstrain/tear
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12
Q

How can you diagnosis grade of sprain with the amount of translation

A
  • Grade 1 = 0-5 mm of translation with lachmans
  • grade 2 = 5mm-1cm of translation
  • grade 3 = >1cm
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13
Q

What is another way to diagnosis the sprain of an ACL

A
  • end feel can be used
  • normal abrupt/firm
  • abnormal = soft as ACL is not stopping
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14
Q

Requirements for ligament healing

A
  • torn ligament remain in proximity or within highly vascularized tissue
  • Controlled motion stress stimulates and directs better healing
  • protect against harmful stresses
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15
Q

How well do the MCL and ACL heal

A
  • MCL any grade will heal as it is highly vascularized
  • ACL grade 1&2 can scar and heal
  • ACL grade 3 is not going to heal as it does not have enough blood flow
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16
Q

What forces to protect against

MCL/ACL

A
  • MCL = valgus stress
  • ACL = anterior translation (OC Anterior translation during extension)
17
Q

Dynamic stablitiers for
1) ACL
2) PCL
3) MCL
4) LCL

A

1) ACL = hamstrings
2) PCL = quadriceps
3) MCL = pes anerinus muscle attachments
4) LCL = IT band/TL, glute max

18
Q

Basic Principles for MCL non-op care

A
  1. promote early motion
  2. protect WB (hinge brace - control varus/valgus)
  3. get effusion under control
  4. retard muscle atrophy/active muscles
  5. enhance dynamic stability/proprioception and endurance
  6. limit stress on secondary support
19
Q

ACL basic principles for ACL rehab

A
  1. promote early motion
  2. protect WB
  3. get effusion under control
  4. retard muscle atrophy/active muscles
  5. enhance dynamic stability/proprioception and endurance
  6. limit stress on secondary support
20
Q

How to protectively WB - for ACL or non-op care

A
  • avoid deep squat
  • minimize anterior translation for last 45-0º (open chain extension)
  • work on closed chain TKE to avoid anterior shear force
  • strengthen 90-45º
21
Q

ACL non-opconsiderations

A
  • hamstring dominant
  • important to continue jumping twisting with the brace
22
Q

PCL rehab

A
  • emphasis on quadriceps
  • avoid OKC knee flexion (posterior translation of tibia on femur)
23
Q

Women and ACL injuries

A
  • disproportionate
  • anatomical differences
  • muscular and neuromuscular differences
  • jump training: after puberty women land more quad dominant w/valgus collapse
  • tell them to lean forward to engage the hamstrings