MSK 9 - Disorders of the Knee Flashcards

1
Q

How are femoral shaft fractures caused?
In what sites can femoral shaft fractures occur?
What is associated with femoral shaft injuries?
How are they treated?

A
  • High energy injuries, e.g.: road traffic accidents or falls from heights.
  • Proximal (higher up), mid-shaft or supracondylar (just above femoral condyles).
  • Significant blood loss - upto 1.5L which can cause hypovolaemic shock.
  • Traction splint or surgical fixation.
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2
Q

How are tibial plateau (top of the tibia) fractures caused?
What kinds can you get?
What are the potential consequences?
How is it treated?

A
  • High energy injuries, e.g.: fall from height.
  • Uni or Bi-condylar (1 or both condyles fractured)
  • Instability, articular cartilage damage, post traumatic OA
  • Articular segment need to be fixed back to shaft.
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3
Q

How are patella fractures caused?
What kinds can you get?
What is a potential consequence?

A
  • Direct or indirect force to patella
  • Displaced or undisplaced
  • Post-traumatic OA
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4
Q

In which direction do patella dislocations occur?
How do they occur?
How are they treated?

A
  • In a lateral direction
  • Twisting actions in slight flexion, falling on a flexed knee
  • Reduce & immobilise +/- soft tissue reconstruction.
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5
Q

How is meniscal injuries occur?

What are the symptoms?

A
  • Twisting injury in high flexion

- Localised pain, swelling and mechanical symptoms (knee is jamming or locking).

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6
Q

How do medial and lateral collateral ligament injuries occur?
How are they treated?

A
  • Via contact/direct blows e.g..: in sport
  • Medial collateral = valgus strain (force towards midline)
  • Lateral collateral = varus strain (force away from midline)
  • Brace + rehabilitation, can cause “unhappy triad” (medial meniscal, ACL + MCL injury). May need surgical repair/reconstruction.
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7
Q

How do ACL + PCL injuries occur?

Which type is more common?

A

ACL = non-contact, landing or direct change, “giving way”/”twisting and turning”. Most common.

PCL = contact - fall onto knee or hyperextension. Least common (1-2%).

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8
Q

How do knee joint dislocations occur?

Out of the 4 ligaments, how many are ruptured?

A
  • Very rare, caused by high energy trauma.
  • 3 out of 4 ligaments ruptured
  • Reduce + stabilise.
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9
Q

What are the names given to inflammation of the bursae within the knee joint?

A

Pre-patellar bursitis = housemaids knee (from kneeling)
Infra-patellar bursitis = clergymans knee (kneeling but more erect position)
supra-patellar bursitis = knee-joint effusion
semimembranosus bursitis = popliteal (Baker’s) cyst

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10
Q

What are the predispositions for knee OA?
When do symptoms occur?
How is it treated?
What are the 4 signs of OA seen during imaging?

A
  • Age/sex/weight/post-trauma/genetics
  • Symptoms fluctuate, provokes by activity, relieved by rest
  • Strengthening exercises/analgesia/weight loss/activity modification/OA surgery.
  • Due to cartilage thinning - joint space narrows, growth of osteophytes, sclerosis of knee joint + subchondral cysts.
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11
Q

What are the signs of septic arthritis?
When can it occur?
How is it treated?

A
  • Extreme pain, swelling, redness/warmth in knee joint
  • After recent surgery, during knee effusion secondary to a bacterial infection.
  • Antibiotics + surgical washout.
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