Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byChad Washington Modified over 9 years ago
1
Acute Knee Trauma Farhan Quader June 2013 Eliona Corrigan, MD
2
55 y/o female with hx of total knee arthroplasty presented to ED after fall – height of 3-5’ onto concrete – point of impact = left knee Could not ambulate after fall Endorsed tingling around the site which later resolved – +Pain around site, 10/10 H&P
3
PMH: – HTN, obesity, sickle cell trait PSH: – Total Knee Arthroplasty Physical exam: Left knee deformed, tibia anteriorly translocated. No ankle nor hip pain. Brisk cap refill, however, palpable dp/pt on right side with weakly palpable dp on left and non-palpable pt
4
Ddx: – Knee dislocation – Contusion – Ligament sprain/tear – Things to consider: arterial/venous insufficiency Screening: -Knee radiograph -Ultrasound -CT -MRI DDx and Screening
5
Screening Modality Patient falls under variant 2: inability to bear weight Procedure of choice is X-ray knee Ottawa Knee Rule: patients with acute knee pain with 1 or more should have X-ray: – Are 55 years of age or older – Have palpable tenderness over the head of the fibula – Have isolated patellar tenderness – Cannot flex the knee to 90 degrees – Cannot bear weight immediately following the injury, – Cannot walk in the emergency room (after taking four steps).
6
Left Knee Radiograph AP and Lateral Knee 5299990 AP view unremarkable Lateral view remarkable
7
Left Knee Left Knee Radiograph AP and Lateral (previous) 5299990
8
Knee Knee Radiograph, Lateral view s/p reduction 5300218
9
Left Knee Xray Left Knee Radiograph AP and lateral s/p reduction 5300218
10
Left Knee Popliteal Ultrasound ultrasound
11
Left Popliteal artery Ultrasound longitudinal
12
Left Popliteal artery Popliteal arteriogram
14
Conclusion -Anterior dislocations are most common after knee trauma -Dislocations characterized in terms of tibial displacement with respect to femur (anterior, posterior, medial, lateral, and rotary) -Further characterized into high velocity and low velocity -High: violent force such as car accident; result in damage to the structures of the knee complex -Low-velocity: occur in sports settings and seen in athletic trainers; lower rates of neurovascular and associated soft- tissue damage -Predisposing factor = injury to ACL or MCL -Damage to neurovascular system is one of the greatest concerns -Popliteal artery is injured in approximately 20-40% of all knee dislocations -Peroneal nerve can still be injured due to it’s anatomical location as it passes around the fibular neck; 33% of knee dislocations
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.