Joint of the Knee Flashcards

1
Q

What bones does the femur articulate with

A

Medial + lateral condyle of femur articulates with teh condyle of the tibia ( form the tibiofemoral joint)

Femir also articulates with teh patella, the seasmoid bone of the quad tendon ( forms the patallofemoral joint)

They are synovial joints, knee is a modified hinge joint with a relatively large ROM, and is most stable in extension ( closed packed position)

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2
Q

Articular Surface? Describe medial and lateral condyles of the tibia and femur, which is longer in the A-P direction?

A

Medial condyle of both femur and tibia are longer than lateral in the A-P direction, medial femoral condyle projects/ more distal and bears 75 % of the weight

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3
Q

What is genuvalgum & what is genuvarum?

A

Genuvalgum is the when the femur points inward even more than normal, relatively the leg is displaced more laterally

Genuvarum is the opposite it is when the femur points more outward than normal, and the weight of the limb passes more medially

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4
Q

Why is the knee joint intrinsically insecure?

A

This is because the femoral condyles are round, whilst the tibial plateau is rather flat, poor congruency.

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5
Q

Why is knee more susceptible to injury in flexion

A

In extension the knee joint articulations are more congruient and does not allow rotation due to the tightness of ligaments, in a flexed position there is laxity and thus rotation is allowed endangering the joint.

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6
Q

Capsule of the knee joint, what does it entail?

A

It encases both tibiofemoral and patello femoral joints + various intracapsular structures such as the ACL. The synovial membranes cover everythign but articular surfaces ( intracpasular but extrasynovial)

Synovial membrane lines the margins of meniscus
ACL and PCL originate at the back moving forward, they push synovial membrane in front, hence they have synovial fluid anteriorly and laterally but not posteriorly

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7
Q

Describe the pathology of synovial Joints, what is the implications of tearing a synovial joint?

A

It could result in effusion of synovial fluid ( more), or haemathrosis ( bleeding), tearing of ligament coudl take some synovial membrane too

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8
Q

What is the anterior reinforcement of the Knee joint?

A

Quadricepts become the quadriceps tendon, and then terminates at the patellar tendon. The patellar releases retinacular fibres, which pass down alongside patella and terminate at the tibia.

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9
Q

What is the lateral reinforcement of the knee joint capsule?

A

Illiotibial tract
popliteal muscle
Biceps femoris

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10
Q

What is the medial reinforcement of the capulse of the knee? The PES Anserinus

A

From muscles which emerge at the medial apsect of the the tibia.

” Say grace before tea”

Sartorius, gracillis, bursa, semi tendonosis
Referse to insertion of muscle from top down

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11
Q

What is the posterior reinforcement of the capulse of the knee?

A

THis is the oblique popliteal ligament an epansaion of the semimembranosis.

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12
Q

Describe the origins & Insertions of the ACL

A

The anterior cruciate ligament originates on the angetior region of the tibia & inserts into the lateral condyle of the femur at the intercondylar notch.

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13
Q

Describe the origins & insertions of the PCL

A

The posterior cruciate ligament originates at the posterior region of the tibia and then inserts into the medial condule of the femur.

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14
Q

What is the function of the ACL & PCL

A

The functionof ACL & PCL is to strengthen the articulation between the femur and the tibia by resisting/ stabilising Anterior/Posterior movements

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15
Q

In which direction does the ACL prevent displacement? When is the ligament taut?

A

The ACL prevents forward displacement of tibia on femur. The ligaments are taut in full flexion and full extension, loose in semi flexion ( loose packed position - when injury is most likley to occur)

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16
Q

Common ACL tears, explain mechanism? Refer to how it is stabilised and taught in extension & what type of movement it allows?

A

ACL is taught in the last 15 to 20 degrees of extension & given its orientation allows some medial rotation of the femur on the tibia. When the femur however rotates laterally instead, this might cause the ACL to tear. Happens during extension on weight bearing leg

In injury, skin grafts commonly derived form middle third of the patella tendon

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17
Q

In which direction does the PCL prevent dispacement?

A

It prevents posterior displacement of the tibia in knee flexion.

18
Q

Which ligament is the PCL supported by?

A

Meniscofemoral ligaments

19
Q

When is the TIbia most prone to injury?

A

Tibia is most prone to injury when we fall on a flexed knee, or there is a bumper bar injury.

20
Q

Which muscle is involved in flexion of the knee? How does it occur name origin and insertion?

A

Popliteus muscle, this muscle attaches to the proximal tubia and then to the lateral condyle of the femus pulling the femur down intiating flexion. It also intiates thus a lateral rotation of the femur, reversing the medial rotation which occured in flexion.

21
Q

Medial Collateral ligament, attachments & insertions?

A

Originates on medial femur

  • Long, flat superficial part
  • Deep part blends in with the capsule and attached to the medial meniscus
22
Q

What type of movement does the MCL resist?

A
  • Abduction forces ( resists valgus) resists tibia flipping sideways
  • Limits lateral rotation of the tibia on the femur
  • Limits anterior movement of tibia on the femur, when ACL damaged
23
Q

Unhappy Triad?

A

Injury of

  • MCL
  • Medial meniscus
  • ACL

Commonly occur due to their close relationship

24
Q

Lateral collateral ligament? Attachments? What is its function?

A

Attached to lateral epicondyle of femur

  • seperated from lateral meniscus by popliteus tendon
  • resists varus ( adduction forces)
25
Q

What type of cartilage is the meniscus? What its innervation and blood supply like?

A
  • Fibrocartilage
  • Typically receives good nerve and blood supply to peripheral outer thurd
  • Good nerve supply but poor blood fibrous capsule, so its painful but takes a long time to recover
26
Q

What is the function of the meniscus

A
  • shock absorbers help bear weight
  • increase congruency
  • increasing SA articulation which would otherwise be concentrated on the middle of the bone –> arthritic changes
  • seperates joint into two cavities
27
Q

How does lateral meniscus compare in size to medial meniscus

A

Lateral meniscus is thicker, more rounded, and covers more articular surface. The lateral meniscus bears more weight than the medial meniscus but the medial tibia bears more weight than the lateral.

28
Q

Which cruciate ligament does the lateral meniscus attach to?

A

It attaches to the posterior crcuiate ligament via the meniscofemoral ligaments, which pulls it posteriorly upon flexion

29
Q

Which ligament is the medial meniscus attached to?

A

The medial meniscus is attached to the medial collateral ligament, hence movement is restricted

30
Q

Which meniscus is injured more and why?

A

Medial meniscus

  • Horns are further apart
  • It is longer
  • It is firmly attached to medial collateral ligament (less mobile)

May be nipped or turn, longitudinal tearing –> framgent flips into joitn space causing locked knee in some flexion & difficult to extend

31
Q

What is the function of bursa?

A

• Protect tendon and ligaments against bone (reduce friction)

32
Q

Name the two communicating Bursa? Its locations & its pathologies

A

SUprapatellar bursa & semimembranosus bursa

Supra patellar bursa
- communicates with joint cavity ( fluid, pus, blood) - pathologies cause knee inflammation above the knee joitn

Semimembranosus/ popliteal bura
- lies deep to tendinous insertion of semimambranosus, beneath quadrriceps and politeus myscke.

Pathology
Bakers cyst - thickening and enlargement of bursa form excessive flexion

33
Q

Name the three non communicating bursa

A

Prepaterllar bursa
Infrapaterllar bursa
Deep infrapaterlla bursa

34
Q

What to infrapaterllar fat pads do?

A

fill out irregularities  intracapsular but extra-synovial
Pushes out and forms folds of synovial membrane = plicae

It is in between front of tibia and patella

35
Q

Patellofemoral joint, how is its normal alignment maintained

A

Strong vastus medialis muscle
medial paterllar retinacular
Raised lip on lateral femoral condule, in order to maintian the patella within the trochlear groove- prevents it from sliding laterally out of the groove

The patella can move up and down in this groove during flexion and extension.

36
Q

Talk about the pull of the quadriceps on patella

A

During flexion the quadricepts muscle pulls the patella obliquely laterally, whilst the patellar tendon will pull it vertically down, this can cause the patella to displace laterally. hence stabilised by

  • vastus medialis
  • raised laterla lip
  • medial retinacular fibres
37
Q

What is the Q angle

A

Angle between the tendon of the quad and the patella tendon

38
Q

What makes you more susceptible to patella dislocation

A

If vastus medialis is weak

A woman due to Q angle

39
Q

Patella Dislocation, what does chrondomalacia patellae mean

A

Patella dislocation

  • abnormal alignment of patella with femur
  • cartilage on lateral side involved in articulartion
  • cartilage degeneration occurs

Knee cap rubbing against one side of knee joitn despite there being smooth cartilage on posterior surface of patella for it to glide smoothly over surface

40
Q

Biparitite patellae

A

Patella has centre of ossificaiton with in it, two parts seperated by a growth plate. May appear as a fracture on xray