Top Banner
Knee Examination Kathy Rainsbury February 2008
18

Knee Examination Kathy Rainsbury February 2008. How to diagnose a knee complaint - HISTORY 1) Patients age + sex 2) Does the knee swell? 3) Is there a.

Mar 28, 2015

Download

Documents

Emma Pearson
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Knee Examination Kathy Rainsbury February 2008. How to diagnose a knee complaint - HISTORY 1) Patients age + sex 2) Does the knee swell? 3) Is there a.

Knee Examination

Kathy Rainsbury

February 2008

Page 2: Knee Examination Kathy Rainsbury February 2008. How to diagnose a knee complaint - HISTORY 1) Patients age + sex 2) Does the knee swell? 3) Is there a.

How to diagnose a knee complaint - HISTORY

• 1) Patient’s age + sex

• 2) Does the knee swell?

• 3) Is there a mechanical problem?

Page 3: Knee Examination Kathy Rainsbury February 2008. How to diagnose a knee complaint - HISTORY 1) Patients age + sex 2) Does the knee swell? 3) Is there a.

Age + sexAge Group Males Females

0-12 Discoid lateral meniscus Discoid lateral meniscus

12-18 Osteochondritis dissecans

Osgood-Schlatter’s

1st patella dislocation

18-30 Longitudinal meniscal tears Recurrent dislocation patella

Chondromalacia patellae

Fat pad injury

30-50 Rheumatoid arthritis Rheumatoid arthritis

40-55 Degenerative meniscus lesions Degenerative meniscus lesions

45+ Osteoarthritis Osteoarthritis

Page 4: Knee Examination Kathy Rainsbury February 2008. How to diagnose a knee complaint - HISTORY 1) Patients age + sex 2) Does the knee swell? 3) Is there a.

Swelling?• Effusion

– presence of pathology which must be investigated

– XS synovial (inflammatory) fluid/ blood/ pus

• Absence of effusion– Does not exclude pathology, but less likely.

– Long-standing meniscus lesions/ OA

Page 5: Knee Examination Kathy Rainsbury February 2008. How to diagnose a knee complaint - HISTORY 1) Patients age + sex 2) Does the knee swell? 3) Is there a.

Mechanical problem?

• Hx of initial injury ‘mechanism’– Degree + direction + incapacity

• Knee ‘give way’?– Going down stairs/ jumping : cruciate ligament– Twisting/ walking/ uneven ground: meniscus

• Knee ‘locks’?– NEVER locks in full extension– Full flexion but limited extension – FB + meniscal (‘click’)

• Pain– When? Localise?

Page 6: Knee Examination Kathy Rainsbury February 2008. How to diagnose a knee complaint - HISTORY 1) Patients age + sex 2) Does the knee swell? 3) Is there a.

Investigations

• Examine other joints (? Rheumatoid/ psoriasis + other inflammatory arthropathies)

• Aspiration + culture of fluid• Bloods• Xray joint (? use)• CXR (if ? TB)• MRI• EUA• Arthroscopy

                                                          

     

Page 7: Knee Examination Kathy Rainsbury February 2008. How to diagnose a knee complaint - HISTORY 1) Patients age + sex 2) Does the knee swell? 3) Is there a.

Examination

• Look

• Measure

• Feel

• Move

Page 8: Knee Examination Kathy Rainsbury February 2008. How to diagnose a knee complaint - HISTORY 1) Patients age + sex 2) Does the knee swell? 3) Is there a.

Surface anatomy

Page 9: Knee Examination Kathy Rainsbury February 2008. How to diagnose a knee complaint - HISTORY 1) Patients age + sex 2) Does the knee swell? 3) Is there a.

Surface anatomy 2

10

- Joint line

5

1

Page 10: Knee Examination Kathy Rainsbury February 2008. How to diagnose a knee complaint - HISTORY 1) Patients age + sex 2) Does the knee swell? 3) Is there a.

Inspection (ant. + post.)

• Symmetry

• Swelling/ bruising/ scars/ rash/ deformity/ wasting/ bursae

• (Heat)

• Patella position – quads/ extensor apparatus intact?

Page 11: Knee Examination Kathy Rainsbury February 2008. How to diagnose a knee complaint - HISTORY 1) Patients age + sex 2) Does the knee swell? 3) Is there a.

Measure

• Quads circumference

Page 12: Knee Examination Kathy Rainsbury February 2008. How to diagnose a knee complaint - HISTORY 1) Patients age + sex 2) Does the knee swell? 3) Is there a.

Palpate• Effusion – patellar tap

• Fluid displacement

• Tenderness– Bend knee – joint line– Collateral ligaments– Tibial tubercle– Femoral condyles

Page 14: Knee Examination Kathy Rainsbury February 2008. How to diagnose a knee complaint - HISTORY 1) Patients age + sex 2) Does the knee swell? 3) Is there a.

Move - instability

• 1) Valgus stress test (+ve if medial lig torn)

• 2) Varus stress test ( +ve lat lig torn)

• 3) Anterior Drawer test (+ve if ant cruciate torn)– Or Lachman test

• 4) Posterior Drawer test (+ve if post cruciate torn)

Page 15: Knee Examination Kathy Rainsbury February 2008. How to diagnose a knee complaint - HISTORY 1) Patients age + sex 2) Does the knee swell? 3) Is there a.

Instability - rotatory

• MacIntosh test / pivot shift test (difficult if patient not under anaesthesia)

Page 16: Knee Examination Kathy Rainsbury February 2008. How to diagnose a knee complaint - HISTORY 1) Patients age + sex 2) Does the knee swell? 3) Is there a.

Menisci

• Feel for clicks, listen for crepitus

• McMurrays test – medial + lateral menisci

• (or Apley’s grind test)

Page 17: Knee Examination Kathy Rainsbury February 2008. How to diagnose a knee complaint - HISTORY 1) Patients age + sex 2) Does the knee swell? 3) Is there a.

And finally…

• Gait

• Genu varum ‘varus my pig?’ • Genu valgus

varus

valgus

Page 18: Knee Examination Kathy Rainsbury February 2008. How to diagnose a knee complaint - HISTORY 1) Patients age + sex 2) Does the knee swell? 3) Is there a.

• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fNUGyNYVhqE

• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IwBW-X4n1fU