Knee Injury Flashcards

1
Q

Ruptured ACL

A
  • Sport injury
  • Mechanism - high twisting force applied to bent knee
  • Typically present with loud crack, pain and rapig joint swelling (haemarthrosis)
  • Poor healing
  • Manage with intense physiotherapy or surgery
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2
Q

Ruptured PCL

A
  • Mechanism - hyperextension injuries
  • Tibia lies back on the femur
  • Paradoxical anterior drawer test
  • May occur from dashboard injury
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3
Q

Ruptured MCL

A
  • Mechanism - leg forced into valgus via force outside the leg
  • Knee instable when put into valgus position
  • May commonly result from skiing
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4
Q

Meniscal tear

A
  • Rotational sporting injuries
  • Delayed knee swelling
  • Joint locking (patient may develop skills to ‘unlock’ the knee)
  • Recurrent episodes of pain and effusions are common, often following minor trauma
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5
Q

Chondromalacia patellae

A
  • Teenage girls, following an injury to knee (i.e. dislocation patella)
  • Typical history of pain on going downatairs or at rest
  • Tenderness, quadriceps wasting
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6
Q

Dislocation of the patella

A
  • Most commonly occurs as a traumatic primary event, either through direct trauma or through severe contraction of quadriceps with knee stretched in valgus and external rotation
  • Genu valgum, tibial torsion and high riding patella are risk factors
  • Skyline x-ray views of patella are required, although displaced patella may be clinically obvious
  • An osteochondral fracture is present in 5%
  • The condition has a 20% recurrence rate
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7
Q

Fractured patella

A
  • Two types:
    • Direct blow causing undisplaced fragments
    • Avulsion fracture
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8
Q

Tibial plateau fracture

A
  • Occur in the elderly (or following significant trauma in young)
  • Mechanism: knee forced into valgus or varus, but the knee fractures before the ligaments rupture
  • Varus injury affects medial plateau and if valgus injury, lateral plateau depressed fracture occurs
  • Schatzker Classification system used
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9
Q

Quadriceps and patella tendon ruptures

A
  • Presentation
    • M>F
    • Eccentric loading of the knee extensor mechanism
    • Often pain leading up to rupture consistent with underlying tendonopathy
    • Tenderness at site of rupture
    • Palpable defect usually within 2cm of superior pole of patella
    • Unable to extend knee against resistance
    • Unable to perform a straight leg raise with complete rupture
  • Management
    • Knee immobilisation in brace for partial tear with intact knee extensor mechanism and for patients who cannot tolerate surgery
    • Operative primary repair with reattachment to patella
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