12: Knee and Ankle - Smith Flashcards

1
Q

_______ condyle deviates from the femoral midline more

A

medial

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2
Q

longer and narrower condyle

A

medial femoral condyle

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3
Q

which condyle facilitates the screw-home mechanism

A

longer medial condyle

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4
Q

which facet on the tibia is longer?

A

medial

set a little bit more distally than the lateral facet

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5
Q

describe the shape of lateral and medial menisci

A

medial - c shaped

lateral - complete circle

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6
Q

the menisci in cross section are ________ shaped

A

triangular

- wider around periphery, thinner near middle

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7
Q

what are the menisci and what are there function?

A
  • fibrocartilaginous structures attached to tibia between femoral condyles
  • shock absorption and spacers within joint
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8
Q

in what motion is knee more stable?

A

extension

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9
Q

what type of joint is the knee joint?

A

ginglymus (hinged) with two degrees of freedom

*actually has six degrees of freedom (flex/extend, int/ext rotation, ab/adduction)

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10
Q

describe “roll and glide” of knee

A
  • femur will roll and glide during knee flexion to allow the knee to flex without impinging on post tibial plateau
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11
Q

describe “screw-home mechanism”

A
  • external rotation of tibia on femur during last 15-20 degrees of extension OKC
  • internal rotation of the femur CKC
  • increases osseous stability of the knee joint
  • occurs b/c medial femoral condyle has a longer articular surface? (uses it up on lateral side )(also a soft tissue component)
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12
Q

name the muscles of the anterior thigh

A

quadriceps femoris (vastus medialis, vastus intermedius, vastus lateralis, rectus femoris)
sartorius
articularis genu

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13
Q

function of the anterior thigh muscles in OKC and CKC

A
OKC = extend knee
CKC = pull thigh over stationary tibia
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14
Q

name the muscles of the posterior thigh

A

hamstrings (semimebranosus, semitendinosus, biceps femoris)

popliteus

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15
Q

posterior thigh muscles function in OKC

A
  • knee joint flexors

- occurs during swing phase

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16
Q

name the muscles of the medial thigh

A

adductor magnus
adductor longus
adductor brevis
gracilis

(function is minimal in gait)
(lateral is tensor fascia lata which is also minimal function)

17
Q

contact phase (knee)

A
  • knee joint flexing to absorb shock
  • hamstrings contract to flex knee
  • quadriceps contract to keep knee from buckling (counteract hamstrings)
18
Q

midstance phase (knee)

A
  • quads continue contracting and extend knee until body mass passes over the knee joint
  • tensor fascia lata externally rotates the tibia on femur during last 20 degrees of knee extension
19
Q

propulsive phase (knee)

A
  • tensor fascia lata continues to externally rotate the tibia as knee continues to extend
  • adductors contract during double support
  • hamstrings start to flex preparing for swing phase
20
Q

swing phase (knee)

A
  • hamstrings flex to allow foot to clear ground
  • knee extends the rest of phase preparing for contact
  • quadriceps only needed last 20 degrees of knee extension due to whip like action of hip
  • hamstrings contract to counteract the quads and keep knee from fully extending
21
Q

describe the inferior tibiofibular articulation

A
  • fibrous articulation

- strength is increased by interosseous membrane

22
Q

*** when is ankle joint more stable?

A

dorsiflexed position (the thicker portion of talus is in the ankle joint)

23
Q

which part of the talus is wider?

A

anterior portion is 25% wider

24
Q

how is the fibula located in relation to tibia?

A

more distal and posterior to tibia

25
Q

what is the ankle joint axis (degrees)

A
  • 8 from transverse
  • 20-30 from frontal plane
  • roughly perpendicular to sagittal plane

what does this mean???
mild abduction with ankle dorsiflexion/ mild adduction with ankle plantarflexion

26
Q

what motion occurs at ankle joint with dorsiflexion

A

mild abduction

mild adduction with ankle plantarflexion

transverse plane motion at ankle reduces amount of frontal plane motion needed at subtalar joint

27
Q

OKC ankle joint

A

dorsiflexion

plantarflecion

28
Q

CKC ankle joint

A

dorsiflexion - tibia moves anterior over planted foot

plantarflexion - tibia moves posterior over planted foot

29
Q

ankle joint ROM

A

dorsiflexion 10 +

plantarflexion 45 +

30
Q

minimum ROM needed at ankle joint

A
10 dorsiflexion (if less = equinus) 
20 plantarflexion
31
Q

when you repeat ankle dorsiflexion with knee flexed, what do you expect?

A
  • this releases gastroc

- with knee flexed is normally greater than with knee extended

32
Q

if body can’t get enough sagittal plane motion in ankle where will it go for compensation?

A
  1. knee
  2. MTJ oblique axis
  3. STJ

looking for joints close with sagittal plane motion

33
Q

most common rotational deformity below the knee

A

tibial torsion “ a change in the axial relationship of foot to thigh”

34
Q

how do you measure rotational deformity below the knee?

A
  • distal tibiofibular axis created by malleoli in relation to axis of knee
  • IMPOSSIBLE to measure any amount of actual torsion or twisting of tibia
35
Q

malleolar positioning as you grow

A
  • birth = 0-5 external malleolar position
  • 1 yo = 10
  • increases by one degree for each year of age until 12/13
  • final = 18-23 degrees of external malleolar positioning
  • actual amount of tibial torsion = 13-18