Show Menu
Cheatography

Knee Sprain Cheat Sheet (DRAFT) by

Presentation, Management

This is a draft cheat sheet. It is a work in progress and is not finished yet.

Ligaments of the Knee

Ligaments of the Knee 2

- Medial collateral Ligament (MCL): Medial femoral condyle to posterior medial tibial crest - shares interc­onn­ections with joint capsule, muscle­/tendon units and medial meniscus
Provides resistance against lateral to medial valgus stress
Most commonly injured
- Lateral Collateral ligament (LCL) - Lateral epicondyle of the femur to distal fibular head
resists medial to lateral varus movements during frist 30 degree of knee flexion + limits ext rot when the knee is flexed

Classi­fic­ation

- Grade I: Stretch with no macros­copic fibre disruption
- Grade II: Partial fibre disruption
- Grade III: Rupture
Grade III can involve the ACL as well
- MCL, ACL, meniscus - unhappy triad

Presen­tation

- Pain on medial­/la­teral aspect of the knee after trauma
- May hear pop with pain
- Loss of ROM from pain and swelling
- Aggravated by activity
- Weakne­ss/­ins­table knee
- Clicking can be present if meniscus is affected
- Tender­nes­s/s­welling over affected ligament
- Baker's cyst could indicate intra-­art­icular damage
- PROM flex and ext usually preserved unless pain/s­wel­lin­g/i­solated
- +ve Valgus­/varus stress test
- +ve bulge sign
- +ve Anterior draw, +ve Lachman's +ve Pivot shift +ve lever test, +ve Posterior drawer, +ve Thessaly, +ve Mcmurray (for involv­ement of ACL, PCL and meniscus)

Imaging

- Only if Ottowa knee rules present
- MRI only if pre-op planni­ng/­inv­est­igating other areas affected

DDx

- Meniscus injury
- F#
- Osteoc­hondral lesion
- Disloc­ation
- Contusion
- Patella sublux­ation
- Tendinitis
- Bursitis

Management

- Grade II and Grade III need support (double upright hinged knee for II and immobi­liser for III for 1-6 weeks)
- Crutches can be used
- RICE
- ROM (flexion and ext to non-pa­inful arc)
Completed Phase I rehab when full weight bearing and normal gait
Phase II: Quads, hamstr­ings, gastro­soleus, hip abductors streng­thening
Closed chain kinetic - heel slides, short arc extens­ions, hamstring curls, toe raises, hip abduction, squats, wall slides, stationary bicycle, water aerobics)
Progress when full ROM with no swelling
Phase III: Straight line running - jogging and progre­ssing to sprinting, then narrow S- shaped patterns, then sports specific drills
- Continue with myofascial release and stretching : Hip flexors, Quads, Hamstr­ings, Gastro­cne­miu­s/s­oleus
Pt return Grade I-II return to play within 1-3 weeks
Grade III needs >6 weeks to heal
- Surgery only if functi­onally unstable or patients with persistent pain and/di­sab­ility, failed conser­vative management

Meniscus Injury

- Affixed to superior articular surface of tibia
- Peripheral 1/3 is vascul­arised and innervated - pain and propri­oce­ption
- Remainder is avascular and lacks nerve supply
- Transmits most of the compre­ssive loads (mostly lateral, but medial = more stabil­ity), shock absorp­tion, prevention of synovial imping­ement, synovial fluid distri­bution and lubric­ation

Demogr­aph­ics­/Risk factors

- Males affected more than females
- Can occur at any age, in elderly, degene­rative tears can occur
- Medial affected more than lateral (due to the mobility of lateral)

Classi­fic­ation

- Traumatic or Degene­rative
- Vertical (commo­nest) - flap, parrot beak, bucket handle
- Oblique
- Radial­/Tr­ans­verse - disrupt fibres - more common in lateral meniscus
- Longit­udinal
- Horizontal
- Complex

Presen­tation

- Young patients = traumatic (sudden twist on a loaded knee)
- Older patients = insidious
- Patient may have difficulty weight bearing - altered gait
- Interm­ittent moveme­nt-­related pain - deep knee bends
- Clicking, catching and locking - 20-45 degrees of extension is common
- Patient reports a sense of giving way/bu­ckling
- Joint line tenderness
- Palpation of the joint = increased synovial fluid production (cysts)
- Palpation of mensci
Lateral: flexion and external rot
Medial: Knee flexion and internal rot of tibia
- ROM limited in flex and ext (rubbery movement block if bucket handle)
- +ve Thessaly test, +ve Mcmurrays

Imaging

- May be needed to rule out F#
- Ottawa knee rules
Age >55
Tenderness at the head of the fibula
Isolated tenderness of the patella
Inability to flex the knee >90 degrees
Inability to weight bear both immedi­ately and in ER for 4 steps
- MRI but false positives are common (only if surgery is indicated)

Management

- Peripheral radial tears <5mm and longit­udinal tears along posterior horn of the lateral meniscus are shown to improve with con care
- RICE
- Avoid twisting on the knee
- Bracing
- Temp stop the sports
- Stretching and release of hamstr­ings, adductors, quads, gastro­soleus, popliteus
- EMT/SMT of ankle , fibular head,hip, SI , spine
- Stationary bicycling, water walking,
- Isometric strength - as swelling decreases
- Then dynamic exercises - single leg calf raises, knee flex, ext, lunges >80 degrees of knee flex
- Hip/knee stability - gluteal weakness and patell­ofe­moral tracking
- Arch supports if hyperp­ron­ation
- Rehab after surgery usually advised (hamst­rings and quads, ROM exercises