18 Oct ANTERIOR KNEE PAIN
Lateral patella compression syndrome
- Maltracking of patella due to tight lateral retinaculum
- Excessive lateral patellar tilt
- Treatment is usually physiotherapy and stretching exercises
Causes
- Mechanical
- Tight lateral retinaculum leading to excessive lateral patellar tilt and mobility.
- Increased femoral anti-version
- Genu valgum
- External tibial torsion/ Pronated foot
Clinical features
- Pain on climbing stairs
- Theatre sign( pain on prolonged sitting)
- Pain on compression of patella
- Lateral facet tenderness
- Inability to evert the lateral facet of patella
- Lateral patella-femoral angle on merchants x-ray view
Treatment
- Anti-inflammatory and physiotherapy
- for most of the cases and done for a prolonged period of time
- closed chain exercises of Vastus medialis obliues(VMO) , Vastus medialis and quadriceps exercises.
- Arthroscopic lateral release for patients without instability with decreased medial patellar glide less than 1 quadrant
- Patellar realignment surgery
- maquets( Anteriorization of tibial tubercle)
- Medialization od tibial tuberosity ( Elmslie-Trillat procedure)
- Fulkersons osteotomy( Anteriorization and medicalisation of tibial tuberosity)
Osgood-schlatters disease
- Its a tractional apophysitis of tibial tubercle
- tibial tubercle is clinically enlarged
- treatment is usually non-operative
Demographics
- More common in boys
- Male 12-15 years
- Female 8-12years
- 20-3-% B/L
- Common in athletes involved in jumping and sprinting
Clinical features
- Anterior knee pain
- Enlarged tibial tubercle
- tenderness over the tibial tuberosity
- pain on resisted knee extension
Investigation
- fragmentation and irregular tibial tuberosity on a lateral view knee x-ray
- MRI
- D/D- Sinding larsen Johansson syndrome, osteochondroma of proximal tibia, tibial tubercle fracture and jumpers knee
Treatment
- Non-operative
- Cast immobilisation for 6 weeks
- NSAIDS
- Physiotherapy
- Quadriceps exercises
- Operative
- excision
Plica syndrome
- Embriological remnant synovial fold which causes anterior knee pain
- There is painful restriction of knee movement with thick and inflamed synovial folds.
Pathophysiology
- Trauma in 50% of cases
- Most common plicas
- ligamentum mucosum
- supra-patellar plica
- Medial plica
Clinical features
- Snapping
- Buckling
- knee pain on sitting
- Tender and palpable in the medial parapatellar region
- Resisted flexion of knee causes pain over anterior knee
Management
- Investigation
- MRI
- Treatment
- NSAID, activity modification and physiotherapy
- Arthroscopic resection.
Quadriceps tendinosis
- Inflammation of supra patellar tendon
- usually diagnosis is made clinically by palpating tenderness over the quadriceps
- treatment is conservative mostly.
- Also seen along with patella hyper mobility
Epidemiology and pathophysiology
- Male to female 8:1
- common in athletes involved in jumping
- occurs due to repetitive contraction of extensor mechanism leading to micro tear at bone and tendon interface
- associated with jumpers knee
Clinical feature
- Athletes with jumping history or recent trauma complaining of pain over superior border of patella.
- Pain with resisted knee extension
- Hyper mobility of patella
- Blazina classification
- phase 1 pain after activity
- phase 2 pain during and after activity
- phase 3 persistent pain with or without activity
Investigation
- X-ray in AP, lateral and merchants view
- USG
- MRI most sensitive test
Treatment
- Nonoperative
- physio open chain and stretching exercises. taping reduces pain
- Ultrasonic therapy
- Extracorporial shock wave therapy
- corticosteroids injection is contraindicated due to quadriceps tendon rupture.
- PRP injection improves pain
- operative
- mucoid degenerative tissue resection
- bone abrasion at tendon insertion.
Chondromalacia patellae
- May be associated with miserable alignment syndrome
- Idiopathic in nature
- Treatment is usually conservative
Etiology( Causes)
- women more than men
- occurs in adolescents and young
- multifactorial
- limb malalignment
- muscle weakness
- chondral lesion
- maltracking patella
- increased femoral antiversion
- increase external tibial torsion
- Genu valgum
Classification
- Outer bridge classification
- 0 normal cartilage
- 1 softening
- 2 fissuring and fragmentation
- 3 partial thickness changes (crab meat changes)
- 4 exposed subchondral bone
Presentation and imaging
- peripatellar or retropatellar pain aggravated by climbing stairs, squatting and kneeling
- Atrophy of quadriceps muscles
- Patellar maltracking
- pain on compression of patella
- MRI best imaging modality
Treatment
- Nonoperative
- NSAIDS
- Rest
- Physiotherapy
- Activity modification
- operative
- Arthroscopic debridement
- if malt racking then patellar realignment surgery
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