Knee Anatomy: Clinical Correlation Flashcards

1
Q

What 4 bones make up the knee?

A

Femur, tibia, fibula, patella

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2
Q

What links patellofemoral joint?

A

Medial patellofemoral ligament

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3
Q

Which meniscus (lateral or medial) is larger? More tightly anchored?

A

Medial meniscus

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4
Q

What 4 ligaments keep knee joint together? Which is most likely to tear?

A

Anterior and posterior cruciates + medial (more likely to tear) and lateral collaterals

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5
Q

What muscles and tendons make up the quadriceps? Which quad muscle is the one which crosses 2 joints and is thus more likely to be injured? Which muscle is most likely to be torn on the posterior calf?

A

Rectus femoris (crosses 2 joints, more likely to be injured), vastus medialis, vastus lateralis, vastus intermedius, quad tendon, patellar tendon. On the posterior calf, likely torn muscle is gastrocnemius.

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6
Q

What muscles make up back of knee?

A

Hamstrings [biceps femoris semitendeninosus (for grafting), semimembranosus], gracilis, sartorius, gastrocnemius, popliteus

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7
Q

What makes up the sciatic nerve? What does the popliteal artery become?

A

Tibial nerve and common fibular (peroneal) nerve. Popliteal artery becomes posterior tibial artery, anterior tibial artery, and common fibular artery (peroneal artery)

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8
Q

Symptoms of patellofemoral pain

A

No clue of start (insideous onset), diffuse pain in anterior knee while climbing stairs, sitting for too long, or getting up from a seat. May occassionally feel unstable.

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9
Q

What is q angle? Are higher q angles good or bad?

A

Q angle is angle between femur and tibial bones. Higher q angles = increased patellofemoral problems.

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10
Q

How would you treat patellofemoral joint issues?

A

No surgery. Just stretches of quads and vastus medialis strengthening. ONly go for surgery after 6 months of therapy

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11
Q

What are symptoms of meniscal tears?

A

Isolated joint line pain, mech symptoms, unknown/slow onset, locking of knee (but NOT in extension), jointline tenderness, duck walk

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12
Q

Symptoms of locked meniscus tear? Treatment?

A

Presents locked in flexion. Cannot fully extend knee, sudden onset. Treat with partial mensicectomy

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13
Q

What are some injuries related to extensor mechanism of the anterior thigh?

A

Quad tendon rupture, patellar fracture, patellar tendon rupture

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14
Q

What triggers MCL sprain?

A

Valgus force to knee

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15
Q

What triggers ACL tear? Who is more prone to it?

A

Tear of ACL is usually non-contact injury and is associated with “pop” sound during a cut or jump. More common in females, and leads to instability during sports play.

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16
Q

How to treat ACL tear?

A

Hamstring grafting (use semitendinosus, gracilis. Less likely to fail, unlike allograft reconstruction).

17
Q

What leads to PCL tear?

A

Falling on flexed knee while with a plantar flexed ankle due to driving tibula posteriorly.