Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byCordelia Williamson Modified over 9 years ago
1
Patellar Instability Clint R Beicker MD June 5, 2015 Please note change from program
2
Objectives Review the anatomy and biomechanics of the MPFL and structures that provide patellofemoral stability Discuss the management of the first-time patellar dislocation Review surgical treatment of recurrent patellar instability and expected rehabilitation and return to activity
3
Incidence of primary patellar dislocation is 5.8 cases / 100,000 population 43 cases / 100,000 population in children Peak incidence at age 15 Highest risk of acute dislocation (and recurrence) is females age 10-17 Acute patellofemoral dislocation is most common acute knee disorder in children and adolescents 2 nd most common cause of hemarthrosis in adolescent knee Redislocation rates range from 20-55 % A common problem
4
Osseous component Trochlear morphology Bony Alignment Dynamic component Extensor Mechanism function Static/Ligamentous component MPFL Medial Patellofemoral Ligament Patellar stability
6
MPFL Anatomy Runs in layer 2 on the medial aspect of knee Origin: 1.9 mm anterior / 3.8 mm distal to adductor tubercle Insertion: superior 2/3rds of patella – Broad insertion over 28 mm over superior patella Average length 59.8 mm
7
Primary restraint to patellofemoral instability at 0-30 degrees of flexion Provides over 50% of medial restraint to patella Tensile strength = 208 N Tear occurs at femur (66%), patella (13%) and midsubstance (21%) Once patella is engaged in the trochlear groove, lateral patellar facet provides primary resistance force Medial patellofemoral ligament (MPFL )
8
Exam Assess overall limb alignment Assess generalized ligamentous laxity Tenderness patella, along MPFL, at femur Crepitance Effusion Patellar Glide test Patellar apprehension sign Patella tilt J sign Evaluation
9
J Sign
10
Evaluation Radiographs AP, lateral, Merchant views Fractures Trochlear dysplasia Crossing sign Dejour classification Patellar height Caton-Deschamps Blackburne-Peel Insall-Salvati Patellar tilt Patellar position/subluxation
11
Evaluation Radiographs AP, lateral, Merchant views Fractures
12
Evaluation Radiographs: AP, lateral, Merchant views Trochlear dysplasia Crossing sign
13
Evaluation Trochlear dysplasia
14
Evaluation Radiographs: AP, lateral, Merchant views
15
CT/MRI TT-TG (anterior tibial tubercle – trochlear groove) distance Originally via CT Can do via MRI underestimates TT-TG by 3-4 mm) Value >20 mm is strong predictor of instability
16
Advanced Imaging Evaluation When to get an MRI Large knee effusion Recurrent dislocation Fracture on xray Clinical concern -*Up to 95% incidence of cartilage lesions on MRI *Nomura et al – Arthroscopy – 2003
17
All Patellar Dislocations are not the same because the underlying anatomy is not the same
18
Management of the 1 st time dislocator
19
Nonoperative treatment for first time dislocation (222 pts) 62 % successs rate overall (38% redislocation) The worst combination: 31 % success if open physis and trochlear dysplasia 51% of patients with recurrence required surgery Can We Predict Recurrence?
21
Have we improved our outcomes? Hawkins et al – 1986 – AJSM 27 patients with acute dislocations treated either operatively with MPFL +LR (7 pts) or non-operatively (20 pts) “Although the incidence of recurrence among those individuals can be decreased [with surgery], at least 30% to 50% of all patients having sustained a primary patellar dislocation will continue to have symptoms of instability and/or anterior knee pain.”
22
2,000 patients in meta-analysis Conclusion: Operative treatment after 1 st patellar dislocation results in lower recurrence (29% vs 34%) but does not affect functional outcome score
23
Not all patellar dislocations are the same
24
Non-operative management Immobilization Closed chain exercises – -quad (VMO) strengthening -gluteal strengthening -core strengthening Patellar taping
25
Patellar stabilization surgery Nearly 30 different surgical procedure exist…
26
Post-operative Rehab
27
Thank You
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.