+ All Categories
Home > Documents > The Knee

The Knee

Date post: 05-Jan-2016
Category:
Upload: lucie
View: 31 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
Description:
The Knee. From the Sports Medicine Perspective. Bony Anatomy. Femur Patella Tibia Fibula. Bony Anatomy. Femur: Longest Bone in Body Tibia: WB bone of lower extremity Fibula: Site of Muscle Attachment Patella: Sesamoid Bone A bone that develops within a tendon. Knee Skeletal. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Popular Tags:
39
The Knee
Transcript
Page 1: The Knee

The Knee

Page 2: The Knee

From the Sports Medicine Perspective

Page 3: The Knee

Bony Anatomy

Femur

Patella

Tibia

Fibula

Page 4: The Knee

Bony Anatomy

Femur: Longest Bone in BodyTibia: WB bone of lower extremityFibula: Site of Muscle AttachmentPatella: Sesamoid Bone

A bone that develops within a tendon

Page 5: The Knee

Knee Skeletal

Lateral Condyle

Head of Fibula

Femoral Groove

Gerdy’s Tubercle

Tibial Tuberosity

Pes Anserine

Page 6: The Knee

Sagittal MRI View

Page 7: The Knee

Knee Connective Tissue

Page 8: The Knee

Knee Menisci

Page 9: The Knee

Menisci

Page 10: The Knee

Menisci

Medial Meniscus

Lateral Meniscus

PCL

ACL

Page 11: The Knee

Knee Ligaments

Page 12: The Knee

Medial Collateral LigamentMCL

Page 13: The Knee

MCL

Thick Band of TissueTibia FemurResists Valgus Force

Page 14: The Knee

Valgus

Outside to Inside Force

MCL resists this force

Occurs in FRONTAL PLANE

Page 15: The Knee

Lateral Collateral Ligament LCL

Page 16: The Knee

LCL

Narrow cord like band of tissueFibula FemurResists Varus Forces

Page 17: The Knee

Varus

Inside to Outside Force

LCL resists this forceFRONTAL PLANE

Page 18: The Knee

Increased Valgus

Page 19: The Knee

Collateral Ligament Ruptures

Page 20: The Knee

Ligament Structures

Page 21: The Knee

Anterior Knee

Page 22: The Knee

Anterior Cruciate Ligament ACL

Composed of 3 bandsPrevents anterior

translation of tibiaStabilizes against

excessive rotationStabilizing Ligament

Page 23: The Knee

Healthy ACL

Page 24: The Knee

Torn ACL

Page 25: The Knee

Knee Posterior

Page 26: The Knee

Posterior Cruciate Ligament PCL

Stabilizes the posterior aspect of knee

Prevents hyperextension

Page 27: The Knee

Cadaver Knee

Page 28: The Knee

Quadriceps

Anterior Thigh Musculature

Four Muscles:Rectus FemorisVastus LateralisVastus MedialisVastus Intermedius

Extend the Knee

Page 29: The Knee

Quadriceps

Page 30: The Knee

Rectus Femoris

2 Joint MuscleCrosses hip and knee

Flexes HipExtend the kneeConverges with rest

of quadriceps muscles at tibial tubercle

Page 31: The Knee

Hamstrings

Three MusclesSemimembranosusSemitendinosusBiceps Femoris

Common Origin the ischial tuberosity

Flex the Knee

Page 32: The Knee

Hamstrings

Page 33: The Knee

Popliteus

Page 34: The Knee

Popliteus

Page 35: The Knee

MCL Sprains

Valgus ForceTensile Mechanism

MCLFlexed knee more

vulnerable (open pack position = less stable)

Page 36: The Knee

MCL Injuries

Direct trauma in frontal plane injures MCL

Combination of rotation can result in ACL and meniscus tears

Page 37: The Knee

MCL/LCL Injuries

GRADE I: No instabilityMild EffusionROM fullMild tenderness w/

palpation

Page 38: The Knee

MCL/LCL Injuries

GRADE II: Laxity w/ valgus or

varus stress (more with 30 degrees of flexion)

Decrease in ROMIncrease medial

(MCL) or lateral (LCL) pain

GRADE III:Complete ligament

ruptureComplete loss of

stabilityImmediate pain that

transitions into dull ache

Page 39: The Knee

Treatment

Based on severity of injury

RICEModify activityCrutchesExercises in sagittal

planeProgress to

functional exercise


Recommended