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Knee injuries Dr Abir Naguib.

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Presentation on theme: "Knee injuries Dr Abir Naguib."— Presentation transcript:

1 Knee injuries Dr Abir Naguib

2 Knee pain is the most common musculoskeletal complaint (1/3)
Source of significant disability Most prevalent in physically active individuals

3 Differential diagnosis of knee pain is extensive Accurate diagnosis can be achieved by localizing the anatomic site of pain & patient’s age

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6 Trauma Fracture Ligament sprain Tendon rupture Meniscal tear
Patellar dislocation

7 History Pain characteristics:
Onset- location- duration- severity- quality- aggravating and relieving factors 2. Mechanical symptoms: Pop Locking Giving way

8 Exclude referred pain (hip injury)
3. Effusion: Timing and amount 4. Ability to continue playing 5. History of previous injury Exclude referred pain (hip injury)

9 6. Mechanism of injury Contact (Direction of blow) Non-contact (position of knee) Twisting Hyperextension Deceleration

10 Non-contact injury

11 Hyperextension injury

12 Examination: Inspection: Swelling (location) Ecchymosis Atrophy
Palpation: Tenderness ROM Stability tests Joint line Ligament course Active passive

13 Investigations Radiological Aspiration Arthroscopy X-ray, CT, MRI
(painful swollen joint) Clear yellow Blood Blood + fat droplets Arthroscopy

14 MCL injury

15 CO: Pop at time of injury Pain , swelling (medial) OE: Tenderness, swelling along ligament course Valgus stress test

16 LCL injury Uncommon Mechanism: blow to medial aspect knee Varus force
Similar: (lateral) Varus stress test

17 ACL injury Pop Immediate swelling Giving way

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19 Anterior drawer test

20 Lachman test

21 ACL

22 PCL injury

23 CO: insecurity of knee OE: abrasion on proximal tibia (anterior) mild swelling posterior drawer test

24 Posterior sag sign

25 PCL

26 Meniscal tear CO: Pain after quick twisting or squatting Locking
OE: Swelling Joint line tenderness McMurray test

27 Meniscal tear

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29 Extensor mechanism injury
Quadriceps tendon rupture Patellar tendon rupture Patellar instability

30 Quadriceps tendon rupture
Aged, poorly conditioned (descending,jumping) CO: severe anterior knee pain snap fall suddenly OE: swelling, tenderness (local) Palpable gap proximal to patella inability to extend knee

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32 Quadriceps tendon rupture

33 Patellar tendon rupture
young athletic patients eccentric loading of quadriceps OE: Swelling, tenderness palpable defect at distal pole patella Impaired knee extension

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35 Subluxation – Dislocation
Patellar instability Subluxation – Dislocation Young adults Mechanism: direct blow, forceful Q contraction CO: Buckling Anterior knee pain Difficulty extending knee OE: Swelling (effusion-hemarthrosis) Tenderness medial patella Apprehension sign DD: history & X-ray

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39 In almost 90% of knee injuries an accurate diagnosis can be reached through thorough history taking and careful clinical examination.

40 Thank you


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