Posts Tagged ‘kneecap’

Knee Pains — Suggestion of Remedies

March 10th, 2010
Knee Pain

Knee Pain

Knee pain is an extremely com­mon com­plaint, and there are many causes. It is impor­tant to make an accu­rate diag­no­sis of the cause of your symp­toms so that appro­pri­ate treat­ment can be directed at the cause. If you have knee pain, some com­mon causes include:

* Arthri­tis
Arthri­tis is among the most com­mon causes of knee pain, and there are many treat­ments available.

* Lig­a­ment Injuries
Lig­a­ment injuries com­monly occur dur­ing ath­letic activ­i­ties and can cause dis­com­fort and insta­bil­ity.
o Ante­rior Cru­ci­ate Lig­a­ment (ACL) Injury
o Pos­te­rior Cru­ci­ate Lig­a­ment (PCL) Injury
o Medial Col­lat­eral Lig­a­ment (MCL) Injury

* Car­ti­lage Injuries | Menis­cal Tear
Car­ti­lage tears are seen in young and old patients alike, and are also an extremely com­mon cause of knee pain.

* Patel­lar Ten­donitis
Ten­donitis around the joint is most com­monly of the patel­lar ten­don, the large ten­don over the front of the knee.

* Chon­dro­ma­la­cia Patella
Chon­dro­ma­la­cia causes knee pain under the kneecap and is due to soft­en­ing of the

knee-effusion

knee-effusion

car­ti­lage. It is most com­mon in younger patients (15–35 years old).

* Dis­lo­cat­ing Kneecap
A dis­lo­cat­ing kneecap causes acute symp­toms dur­ing the dis­lo­ca­tion, but can also lead to chronic knee pain.

* Baker’s Cyst
A Baker’s cyst is swelling in the back of the joint, and is usu­ally a sign of another under­ly­ing prob­lem such as a menis­cus tear.

* Bur­si­tis
The most com­mon bursa affected around the joint is just above the kneecap. This is most com­mon in peo­ple who kneel for work, such as gar­den­ers or carpetlayers.

* Plica Syn­drome
Plica syn­drome is an uncom­mon cause of knee pain, and can be dif­fi­cult to diag­nose. The diag­no­sis is usu­ally made at the time of arthroscopy.

* Osgood-Schlatter Dis­ease
Osgood-Schlatter dis­ease is a con­di­tion seen in ado­les­cents and is due to irri­ta­tion of the growth plate just at the front of the joint.

* Osteo­chon­dri­tis Dis­se­cans
Osteo­chon­dri­tis dis­se­cans (OCD) is another con­di­tion seen in ado­les­cents due to the growth of the bone around the joint.

* Gout
Gout is an uncom­mon cause of knee pain. How­ever, in patients who have a diag­no­sis of gout, it must be con­sid­ered as a cause for new onset knee pain.

Treat­ments for Knee Pain
Treat­ment of knee pain depends entirely on the cause of the prob­lem. There­fore, it is of utmost impor­tance that you under­stand the cause of your symp­toms before embark­ing on a treat­ment pro­gram. If you are unsure of your diag­no­sis, or the sever­ity of your con­di­tion, you should seek med­ical advice before begin­ning any treat­ment plan.

Some com­mon treat­ments for knee pain are listed here. Not all of these treat­ments are appro­pri­ate for every con­di­tion, but they may be help­ful in your situation.

* Rest: The first treat­ment for most com­mon con­di­tions that cause knee pain is to rest the joint, and allow the acute inflam­ma­tion to sub­side. Often this is the only step needed to relieve knee pain. If the symp­toms are severe, crutches may be help­ful as well.

Nature Creation Knee Wrap

Nature Cre­ation Knee Wrap

* Cold and Heat Appli­ca­tion: Nature Cre­ation Hot & Cold herbal packs are among the most com­monly used treat­ments for knee pain. So which one is the right one to use, ice or heat? And how long should the ice or heat treat­ments last? Click the fol­low­ing link: Heat or Cold, which Treat­ment is to use.

* Stretch­ing: Stretch­ing the mus­cles and ten­dons that sur­round the joint can help with some causes of knee pain. A good rou­tine should be estab­lished, and fol­low­ing some spe­cific sug­ges­tions will help you on your way.

* Phys­i­cal Ther­apy: Phys­i­cal ther­apy is an impor­tant aspect of treat­ment of almost all ortho­pe­dic con­di­tions. Phys­i­cal ther­a­pists use dif­fer­ent tech­niques to increase strength, regain mobil­ity, and help return patients to their pre-injury level of activity.

* Anti-Inflammatory Med­ica­tion: Non­s­teroidal anti-inflammatory med­ica­tions, com­monly referred to as NSAIDs, are some of the most com­monly pre­scribed med­ica­tions, espe­cially for patients with knee pain caused by prob­lems such as arthri­tis, bur­si­tis, and tendonitis.

* Cor­ti­sone injec­tions: Cor­ti­sone is a pow­er­ful med­ica­tion that treats inflam­ma­tion, and inflam­ma­tion is a com­mon prob­lem in patients with knee pain. Dis­cuss with your doc­tor the pos­si­ble ben­e­fits of a cor­ti­sone injec­tion for your condition.

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Knee Pain — Comprehensive overview covers symptoms, causes, treatment of this common joint condition

March 10th, 2010

Knee Explanations

Knee Expla­na­tions

Almost one in three Amer­i­cans older than age 45 reports some type of knee pain, and it’s a com­mon rea­son that peo­ple visit their doc­tors or the emer­gency room.

Knee pain may be the result of an injury, such as a rup­tured lig­a­ment or torn car­ti­lage. Or, cer­tain med­ical con­di­tions, includ­ing arthri­tis, gout and infec­tion, may be at the root of your knee pain.

Many rel­a­tively minor instances of knee pain respond well to self-care mea­sures. More-serious injuries, such as a rup­tured lig­a­ment or ten­don, may require sur­gi­cal repair.

Although every knee prob­lem can’t be pre­vented — espe­cially if you’re active — you can take cer­tain steps to reduce the risk of injury or disease.

A knee injury can affect any of the lig­a­ments, ten­dons or fluid-filled sacs (bur­sae) that sur­round your knee joint as well as the bones, car­ti­lage and lig­a­ments that form the joint itself. Because of the knee’s com­plex­ity, the num­ber of struc­tures involved, the amount of use it gets over a life­time, and the range of injuries and dis­eases that can cause knee pain, the signs and symp­toms of knee prob­lems can vary widely.

Some of the more com­mon knee injuries and their signs and symp­toms include the following:

Lig­a­ment injuries. Your knee con­tains four lig­a­ments — tough bands of tis­sue that con­nect your thigh­bone (femur) to your lower leg bones (tibia and fibula). You have two col­lat­eral lig­a­ments — one on the inside (medial col­lat­eral lig­a­ment) and one on the out­side (lat­eral col­lat­eral lig­a­ment) of each knee. The other two lig­a­ments are inside your knee and cross each other as they stretch diag­o­nally from the bot­tom of your thigh­bone to the top of your shin­bone (tibia). The pos­te­rior cru­ci­ate lig­a­ment (PCL) con­nects to the back of your shin­bone, and the ante­rior cru­ci­ate lig­a­ment (ACL) con­nects near the front of your shin­bone. A tear in one of these lig­a­ments, which may be caused by a fall or con­tact trauma, is likely to cause:

* Imme­di­ate pain that wors­ens when you try to walk or bend your knee
* A pop­ping sound
* An inabil­ity to bear weight on the injured knee
* A feel­ing that the knee might buckle or give way

Ten­don injuries (ten­dini­tis). Ten­dini­tis is irri­ta­tion and inflam­ma­tion of one or more ten­dons — the thick, fibrous cords that attach mus­cles to bones. Ath­letes, such as espe­cially run­ners, skiers and cyclists, are prone to develop inflam­ma­tion in the patel­lar ten­don, which con­nects the quadri­ceps mus­cle on the front of the thigh to the larger lower leg bone (tibia). If your knee pain is caused by ten­dini­tis, some of the signs and symp­toms include:

* Pain, in one or both knees
* Swelling in the front of the knee or just below the kneecap
* Wors­en­ing pain when you jump, run, squat or climb stairs
* An inabil­ity to com­pletely extend or straighten your knee

Menis­cus injuries. The menis­cus is a C-shaped piece of car­ti­lage that curves within your knee joint. Menis­cus injuries involve tears in the car­ti­lage, which can occur in var­i­ous places and con­fig­u­ra­tions. Signs and symp­toms of this type of injury include:

* Pain
* Mild to mod­er­ate swelling that occurs slowly, as long as 24 to 36 hours after the injury
* An inabil­ity to straighten the knee com­pletely; the knee may feel locked in place

Bur­si­tis. Some knee injuries cause inflam­ma­tion in the bur­sae, the small sacs of fluid that cush­ion the out­side of your knee joint so that ten­dons and lig­a­ments glide smoothly over the joint. Bur­si­tis can lead to:

* Warmth
* Swelling
* Red­ness
* Pain, even at rest
* Aching or stiff­ness when you walk
* Con­sid­er­able pain when you kneel or go up and down stairs
* Fever, pain and swelling if the bursa located over your kneecap bone (prepatel­lar bursa) becomes infected

Loose body. Some­times injury or degen­er­a­tion of bone or car­ti­lage can cause a piece of bone or car­ti­lage to break off and float in the joint space. This may not cre­ate any prob­lems unless the loose body inter­feres with knee joint move­ment — the effect is some­thing like a pen­cil caught in a door hinge — lead­ing to pain and a locked joint.

Dis­lo­cated kneecap. This occurs when the tri­an­gu­lar bone (patella) that cov­ers the front of your knee slips out of place, usu­ally to the out­side of your knee. You’ll be able to see the dis­lo­ca­tion, and your kneecap is likely to move exces­sively from side to side. Signs and symp­toms of a dis­lo­cated kneecap include:

* Intense pain
* Swelling
* Dif­fi­culty walk­ing or straight­en­ing your knee

Osgood-Schlatter dis­ease. Pri­mar­ily affect­ing ath­letic teens and pre­teens, this overuse syn­drome causes:

* Pain, usu­ally worse with activ­ity, espe­cially run­ning and jump­ing
* Swelling
* Ten­der­ness at the bony promi­nence (tib­ial tuberos­ity) just below the kneecap

The dis­com­fort can last a few months and may con­tinue to recur until your teen or pre­teen stops growing.

Ili­otib­ial band syn­drome. This occurs when the lig­a­ment that extends from the out­side of your pelvic bone to the out­side of your tibia (ili­otib­ial band) becomes so tight that it rubs against the outer por­tion of your femur. Dis­tance run­ners are espe­cially sus­cep­ti­ble to ili­otib­ial band syn­drome, which gen­er­ally causes:

* A sharp, burn­ing pain on the outer side of the knee that usu­ally begins after longer dis­tance runs
* Pain that ini­tially goes away with rest from run­ning, but in time may per­sist when you walk or go up and down stairs

With this type of knee injury, there usu­ally isn’t swelling and you’ll likely have nor­mal range of motion.

Hyper­ex­tended knee. In this injury, your knee extends beyond its nor­mally straight­ened posi­tion so that it bends back on itself. Some­times the dam­age is rel­a­tively minor, with pain and swelling when you try to extend your knee. But a hyper­ex­tended knee may also lead to a par­tial or com­plete lig­a­ment tear, espe­cially in your ACL.

Sep­tic arthri­tis. Some­times your knee joint can become infected, lead­ing to swelling, pain and red­ness. There’s usu­ally no trauma before the onset of pain. Sep­tic arthri­tis often occurs with a fever.

Rheuma­toid arthri­tis. The most debil­i­tat­ing of the more than 100 types of arthri­tis, rheuma­toid arthri­tis can affect almost any joint in your body, includ­ing your knees. Com­mon signs and symp­toms of rheuma­toid arthri­tis include:

* Pain
* Swelling
* Aching and stiff­ness, espe­cially when you get up in the morn­ing or after peri­ods of inac­tiv­ity
* Loss of motion in your knees and even­tu­ally defor­mity of the knee joints
* Some­times, a low-grade fever and a gen­eral sense of not feel­ing well (malaise)

Although rheuma­toid arthri­tis is a chronic dis­ease, it tends to vary in sever­ity and may even come and go. Peri­ods of increased dis­ease activ­ity — called flare-ups or flares — often alter­nate with peri­ods of remission.

Osteoarthri­tis. Some­times called degen­er­a­tive arthri­tis, this is the most com­mon type of arthri­tis. It’s a wear-and-tear con­di­tion that occurs when the car­ti­lage in your knee dete­ri­o­rates with use and age. Osteoarthri­tis usu­ally devel­ops grad­u­ally and tends to cause:

* Vary­ing degrees of pain, espe­cially when you stand or walk
* Swelling
* Stiff­ness, espe­cially in the morn­ing and after you’ve been active
* Creak­ing or pop­ping sounds
* A loss of flex­i­bil­ity in your knee joints

Gout and pseudo­gout. Gout, a type of arthri­tis, is likely to cause:

* Red­ness.
* Swelling.
* Intense knee pain that comes on sud­denly — often at night — and with­out warn­ing. The pain typ­i­cally lasts five to 10 days and then stops. The dis­com­fort sub­sides grad­u­ally over one to two weeks, leav­ing your knee joints appar­ently nor­mal and pain-free.

Another con­di­tion, pseudo­gout (chon­dro­cal­ci­nosis), which mainly occurs in older adults, can cause:

* Severe inflam­ma­tion
* Inter­mit­tent attacks of sud­den pain and swelling in large joints, espe­cially the knees

Chon­dro­ma­la­cia of the patella, or patellofemoral pain. This is a gen­eral term that refers to pain aris­ing between your patella and the under­ly­ing thigh­bone (femur). It’s com­mon in young adults, espe­cially those who have a slight mis­align­ment of the kneecap; in ath­letes; and in older adults, who usu­ally develop the con­di­tion as a result of arthri­tis of the kneecap. Chon­dro­ma­la­cia of the patella causes:

* Pain and ten­der­ness in the front of your knee that’s worse when you sit for long peri­ods, when you get up from a chair, and when you climb or descend stairs.
* A grat­ing or grind­ing sen­sa­tion may be present when you extend your knee.

When to see a doc­tor
If you have new knee pain that isn’t severe or dis­abling, a good rule of thumb is to try treat­ing it your­self first. This includes rest­ing, icing and ele­vat­ing the affected knee, and some­times using non­s­teroidal anti-inflammatory drugs to reduce pain and inflam­ma­tion. If you don’t notice any improve­ment in three to seven days, see your doc­tor or a spe­cial­ist in sports med­i­cine or orthopedics.

Some types of knee pain require more imme­di­ate med­ical care. Call your doc­tor if you:

* Can’t bear weight on your knee
* Have marked knee swelling
* See an obvi­ous defor­mity in your leg or knee
* Have wor­ri­some pain
* Have a fever, in addi­tion to red­ness, pain and swelling in your knee, which may indi­cate an infection

In the sim­plest terms, a joint occurs wher­ever two bones come together. But that def­i­n­i­tion doesn’t begin to con­vey the com­plex­ity of joints, which pro­vide your body with flex­i­bil­ity, sup­port and a wide range of motion.

You have four types of joints: fixed, pivot, ball-and-socket and hinge. Your knees are hinge joints, which, as the name sug­gests, work much like the hinge of a door, allow­ing the joint to move back­ward and for­ward. Your knees are the largest and heav­i­est hinge joints in your body. They’re also the most com­plex. In addi­tion to bend­ing and straight­en­ing, they twist and rotate. This makes them espe­cially vul­ner­a­ble to dam­age, which is why they sus­tain more injuries on aver­age than do other joints.

A closer look at your knees
Your knee joint is essen­tially four bones held together by lig­a­ments. Your thigh­bone (femur) makes up the top part of the joint, and two lower leg bones, the tibia and the fibula, com­prise the lower part. The fourth bone, the patella, slides in a groove on the end of the femur.

Lig­a­ments are large bands of tis­sue that con­nect bones to one another. In the knee joint, four main lig­a­ments link the femur to the tibia and help sta­bi­lize your knee as it moves through its arc of motion. These include the col­lat­eral lig­a­ments along the inner (medial) and outer (lat­eral) sides of your knee and the ante­rior cru­ci­ate lig­a­ment (ACL) and pos­te­rior cru­ci­ate lig­a­ment (PCL), which cross each other as they stretch diag­o­nally from the bot­tom of your thigh­bone to the top of your shinbone.

Other struc­tures in your knee include:

* Ten­dons. These fibrous bands of tis­sue con­nect mus­cles to bones. Your knee has two impor­tant ten­dons, which make it pos­si­ble for you to straighten or extend your leg: the quadri­ceps ten­don, which con­nects the long quadri­ceps mus­cle on the front of your thigh to the patella, and the patel­lar ten­don, which con­nects the patella to the tibia.
* Menis­cus. This C-shaped car­ti­lage, which curves around the inside and out­side of your knee, cush­ions your knee joint.
* Bur­sae. A num­ber of these fluid-filled sacs sur­round your knee. They help cush­ion your knee joint so that lig­a­ments and ten­dons slide across it smoothly.

Nor­mally, all of these struc­tures work together smoothly. But injury and dis­ease can dis­rupt this bal­ance, result­ing in pain, mus­cle weak­ness and decreased function.

Some com­mon causes of knee pain and injuries include:

* A blow to the knee, either from con­tact dur­ing sports, a fall or a car acci­dent
* Repeated stress or overuse, which may occur from play­ing sports or if your work or hobby requires doing the same activ­ity over and over again
* Sud­den turn­ing, piv­ot­ing, stop­ping, cut­ting from side to side, which hap­pens fre­quently dur­ing cer­tain sports
* Awk­ward land­ings from a fall or from jump­ing dur­ing sports, such as bas­ket­ball
* Rapidly grow­ing bones, which are espe­cially prone to injury dur­ing sports
* Degen­er­a­tion from aging

patellofemoral

patellofemoral


A num­ber of fac­tors can increase your risk of hav­ing knee prob­lems, including:

* Excess weight. Being over­weight or obese increases stress on your knee joints, even dur­ing ordi­nary activ­i­ties such as walk­ing or going up and down stairs. It also puts you at increased risk of osteoarthri­tis by accel­er­at­ing the break­down of joint car­ti­lage.
* Overuse. Any repet­i­tive activ­ity, from cycling a few miles every morn­ing to gar­den­ing all week­end, can fatigue the mus­cles around your joints and lead to exces­sive load­ing stress. This causes an inflam­ma­tory response that dam­ages tis­sue. If you don’t allow your body time to recover, the cycle of inflam­ma­tion and micro­dam­age con­tin­ues, putting you at increased risk of injury. It’s not repeated motion itself that’s to blame, but rather the lack of ade­quate recov­ery time. That’s why cur­rent strength train­ing guide­lines advise against work­ing the same mus­cle group on con­sec­u­tive days.
* Lack of mus­cle flex­i­bil­ity or strength. A lack of strength and flex­i­bil­ity are among the lead­ing causes of knee injuries. Tight or weak mus­cles offer less sup­port for your knee because they don’t absorb enough of the stress exerted on your knee joints.
* Lack of neu­ro­mus­cu­lar con­trol. Stud­ies have shown that some peo­ple who have abnor­mal move­ment pat­terns of the leg dur­ing activ­i­ties such as squat­ting and step­ping off a step may be pre­dis­posed to knee injury.
* Mechan­i­cal prob­lems. Cer­tain struc­tural abnor­mal­i­ties, such as hav­ing one leg shorter than the other, mis­aligned knees and even flat feet, can make you more prone to knee prob­lems.
* High-risk sports and activ­i­ties. Some sports and activ­i­ties put greater stress on your knees than do oth­ers. Alpine ski­ing with its sharp twists and turns and poten­tial for falls, basketball’s jumps and piv­ots, and the repeated pound­ing your knees take when you run or jog all increase your risk of injury.
* Pre­vi­ous injury. Hav­ing a pre­vi­ous knee injury makes it more likely that you’ll injure your knee again.
* Age. Cer­tain types of knee prob­lems are more com­mon in young peo­ple — Osgood-Schlatter dis­ease and patel­lar ten­dini­tis, for exam­ple. Oth­ers, such as osteoarthri­tis, gout and pseudo­gout, tend to affect older adults.
* Sex. For rea­sons that aren’t entirely clear, your sex may increase your risk of some types of knee injuries. Teenage girls are more likely than are boys to expe­ri­ence an ACL tear or a dis­lo­cated kneecap. Boys, on the other hand, are at greater risk of Osgood-Schlatter dis­ease and patel­lar ten­dini­tis than girls are.

Not all knee pain is seri­ous. But some knee injuries and med­ical con­di­tions, such as osteoarthri­tis, can lead to increas­ing pain, joint dam­age and even dis­abil­ity if left untreated. And hav­ing a knee injury — even a minor one — makes it more likely that you’ll have sim­i­lar injuries in the future.Knee Images

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Understanding Your Knee

August 26th, 2009

How is the knee designed, and what is its function?

knee_jointThe knee is a joint that has three com­part­ments. The thigh bone (femur) meets the large shin bone (tibia) form­ing the main knee joint. This joint has an inner (medial) and an outer (lat­eral) com­part­ment. The kneecap (patella) joins the femur to form a third com­part­ment, called the patellofemoral joint.

The knee joint is sur­rounded by a joint cap­sule with lig­a­ments strap­ping the inside and out­side of the joint (col­lat­eral lig­a­ments) as well as cross­ing within the joint (cru­ci­ate lig­a­ments). These lig­a­ments pro­vide sta­bil­ity and strength to the knee joint.

The menis­cus is a thick­ened car­ti­lage pad between the two joints formed by the femur and tibia. The menis­cus acts as a smooth sur­face for motion and absorbs the load of the body above the knee when stand­ing. The knee joint is sur­rounded by fluid-filled sacs called bur­sae, which serve as glid­ing sur­faces that reduce fric­tion of the ten­dons. Below the kneecap, there is a large ten­don (patel­lar ten­don) which attaches to the front of the tibia bone. There are large blood ves­sels pass­ing through the area behind the knee (referred to as the popliteal space). The large mus­cles of the thigh move the knee. In the front of the thigh, the quadri­ceps mus­cles extend the knee joint. In the back of the thigh, the ham­string mus­cles flex the knee. The knee also rotates slightly under guid­ance of spe­cific mus­cles of the thigh.

The knee func­tions to allow move­ment of the leg and is crit­i­cal to nor­mal walk­ing. The knee flexes nor­mally to a max­i­mum of 135 degrees and extends to 0 degrees. The bur­sae, or fluid-filled sacs, serve as glid­ing sur­faces for the ten­dons to reduce the force of fric­tion as these ten­dons move. The knee is a weight-bearing joint. Each menis­cus serves to evenly load the sur­face dur­ing weight-bearing and also aids in dis­burs­ing joint fluid for joint lubrication.

What injuries can cause knee pain, and what other symp­toms may accom­pany knee pain?

Injury can affect any of the lig­a­ments, bur­sae, or ten­dons sur­round­ing the knee joint. Injury can also affect the lig­a­ments, car­ti­lage, menisci (plural for menis­cus), and bones form­ing the joint. The com­plex­ity of the design of the knee joint and the fact that it is an active weight-bearing joint are fac­tors in mak­ing the knee one of the most com­monly injured joints.

Lig­a­ment injury

Trauma can cause injury to the lig­a­ments on the inner por­tion of the knee (medial col­lat­eral lig­a­ment), the outer por­tion of the knee (lat­eral col­lat­eral lig­a­ment), or within the knee (cru­ci­ate lig­a­ments). Injuries to these areas are noticed as imme­di­ate pain but are some­times dif­fi­cult to local­ize. Usu­ally, a col­lat­eral lig­a­ment injury is felt on the inner or outer por­tions of the knee. A col­lat­eral lig­a­ment injury is often asso­ci­ated with local ten­der­ness over the area of the lig­a­ment involved. A cru­ci­ate lig­a­ment injury is felt deep within the knee. It is some­times noticed with a “pop­ping” sen­sa­tion with the ini­tial trauma. A lig­a­ment injury to the knee is usu­ally painful at rest and may be swollen and warm. The pain is usu­ally wors­ened by bend­ing the knee, putting weight on the knee, or walk­ing. The sever­ity of the injury can vary from mild (minor stretch­ing or tear­ing of the lig­a­ment fibers, such as a low grade sprain) to severe (com­plete tear of the lig­a­ment fibers). Patients can have more than one area injured in a sin­gle trau­matic event.

Lig­a­ment injuries are ini­tially treated with ice packs and immo­bi­liza­tion, with rest and ele­va­tion. It is gen­er­ally rec­om­mended to avoid bear­ing weight on the injured joint, and crutches may be required for walk­ing. Some patients are placed in splints or braces to immo­bi­lize the joint to decrease pain and pro­mote heal­ing. Arthro­scopic or open surgery may be nec­es­sary to repair severe injuries.

Sur­gi­cal repair of lig­a­ments can involve sutur­ing alone, graft­ing, and syn­thetic graft repair. These pro­ce­dures can be done by either open knee surgery or arthro­scopic surgery (described in the sec­tion below). The deci­sion to per­form var­i­ous types of surgery depends on the level of dam­age to the lig­a­ments and the activ­ity expec­ta­tions of the patient. Many repairs can now be done arthro­scop­i­cally. How­ever, cer­tain severe injuries will require an open sur­gi­cal repair. Recon­struc­tion pro­ce­dures for cru­ci­ate lig­a­ments are increas­ingly suc­cess­ful with cur­rent sur­gi­cal techniques.

Menis­cus tears

The menis­cus can be torn with the shear­ing forces of rota­tion that are applied to the knee dur­ing sharp, rapid motions. This is espe­cially com­mon in sports requir­ing reac­tion body move­ments. There is a higher inci­dence with aging and degen­er­a­tion of the under­ly­ing car­ti­lage. More than one tear can be present in an indi­vid­ual menis­cus. The patient with a menis­cal tear may have a rapid onset of a pop­ping sen­sa­tion with a cer­tain activ­ity or move­ment of the knee. Occa­sion­ally, it is asso­ci­ated with swelling and warmth in the knee. It is often asso­ci­ated with lock­ing or an unsta­ble sen­sa­tion in the knee joint. The doc­tor can per­form cer­tain maneu­vers while exam­in­ing the knee which might pro­vide fur­ther clues to the pres­ence of a menis­cal tear.

Rou­tine X-rays, while they do not reveal a menis­cal tear, can be used to exclude other prob­lems of the knee joint. The menis­cal tear can be diag­nosed in one of three ways: arthroscopy, arthrog­ra­phy, or an MRI. Arthroscopy is a sur­gi­cal tech­nique by which a small diam­e­ter video cam­era is inserted through tiny inci­sions on the sides of the knee for the pur­poses of exam­in­ing and repair­ing inter­nal knee joint prob­lems. Tiny instru­ments can be used dur­ing arthroscopy to repair the torn meniscus.

Arthrog­ra­phy is a radi­ol­ogy tech­nique whereby a con­trast liq­uid is directly injected into the knee joint and inter­nal struc­tures of the knee joint thereby become vis­i­ble on X-ray film. An MRI scan is another radi­ol­ogy tech­nique whereby mag­netic fields and a com­puter com­bine to pro­duce two– or three-dimensional images of the inter­nal struc­tures of the body. It does not use X-rays and can give accu­rate infor­ma­tion about the inter­nal struc­tures of the knee when con­sid­er­ing a sur­gi­cal inter­ven­tion. Menis­cal tears are often vis­i­ble using an MRI scan­ner. MRI scans have largely replaced arthrog­ra­phy in diag­nos­ing menis­cal tears of the knee. Menis­cal tears are gen­er­ally repaired arthroscopically.

Ten­dini­tis

Ten­dini­tis of the knee occurs in the front of the knee below the kneecap at the patel­lar ten­don (patel­lar ten­dini­tis) or in the back of the knee at the popliteal ten­don (popliteal ten­dini­tis). Ten­dini­tis is an inflam­ma­tion of the ten­don, which is often pro­duced by a strain event, such as jump­ing. Patel­lar ten­dini­tis, there­fore, also has the name “jumper’s knee.” Ten­dini­tis is diag­nosed based on the pres­ence of pain and ten­der­ness local­ized to the ten­don. It is treated with a com­bi­na­tion of ice packs, immo­bi­liza­tion with a knee brace as needed, rest, and anti­in­flam­ma­tory med­ica­tions. Grad­u­ally, exer­cise pro­grams can reha­bil­i­tate the tis­sues in and around the involved ten­don. Cor­ti­sone injec­tions, which can be given for ten­dini­tis else­where, are gen­er­ally avoided in patel­lar ten­dini­tis because there are reports of risk of ten­don rup­ture as a result of cor­ti­cos­teroids in this area. In severe cases, surgery can be required. A rup­ture of the ten­don below or above the kneecap can occur. When it does, there may be bleed­ing within the knee joint and extreme pain with any knee move­ment. Sur­gi­cal repair of the rup­tured ten­don is often necessary.

Frac­tures

With severe knee trauma, such as motor vehi­cle acci­dents and impact trau­mas, bone break­age (frac­ture) of any of the three bones of the knee can occur. Bone frac­tures within the knee joint can be seri­ous and can require sur­gi­cal repair as well as immo­bi­liza­tion with cast­ing or other supports.

What are dis­eases and con­di­tions that can cause knee pain, and how are they treated?

Pain can occur in the knee from dis­eases or con­di­tions that involve the knee joint, the soft tis­sues and bones sur­round­ing the knee, or the nerves that sup­ply sen­sa­tion to the knee area. In fact, the knee joint is the most com­monly involved joint in rheumatic dis­eases, immune dis­eases that affect var­i­ous tis­sues of the body includ­ing the joints to cause arthritis.

Arthri­tis is inflam­ma­tion within a joint. The causes of knee joint inflam­ma­tion range from non­in­flam­ma­tory types of arthri­tis such as osteoarthri­tis, which is a degen­er­a­tion of the car­ti­lage of the knee, to inflam­ma­tory types of arthri­tis (such as rheuma­toid arthri­tis or gout). Treat­ment of the arthri­tis is directed accord­ing to the nature of the spe­cific type of arthri­tis. For more infor­ma­tion on arthri­tis, please read the fol­low­ing arti­cles: Pso­ri­atic Arthri­tis and Reac­tive Arthritis.

Swelling of the knee joint from arthri­tis can lead to a local­ized col­lec­tion of fluid accu­mu­lat­ing in a cyst behind the knee. This is referred to as a Baker cyst and is a com­mon cause of pain at the back of the knee.

Infec­tions of the bone or joint can rarely be a seri­ous cause of knee pain and have asso­ci­ated signs of infec­tion includ­ing fever, extreme heat, warmth of the joint, chills of the body, and may be asso­ci­ated with punc­ture wounds in the area around the knee.

Tumors involv­ing the joint are extremely rare. They can cause prob­lems with local pain.

The col­lat­eral lig­a­ment on the inside of the knee joint can become cal­ci­fied and is referred to as Pellegrini-Stieda syn­drome. With this con­di­tion, the knee can become inflamed and can be treated con­ser­v­a­tively with ice packs, immo­bi­liza­tion, and rest. Infre­quently, it requires a local injec­tion of corticosteroids.

Chon­dro­ma­la­cia refers to a soft­en­ing of the car­ti­lage under the kneecap (patella). It is a com­mon cause of deep knee pain and stiff­ness in younger women and can be asso­ci­ated with pain and stiff­ness after pro­longed sit­ting and climb­ing stairs or hills. While treat­ment with anti­in­flam­ma­tory med­ica­tions, ice packs, and rest can help, long-term relief is best achieved by strength­en­ing exer­cises for the quadri­ceps mus­cles of the front of the thigh.

Bur­si­tis of the knee com­monly occurs on the inside of the knee (anser­ine bur­si­tis) and the front of the kneecap (patel­lar bur­si­tis, or “housemaid’s knee”). Bur­si­tis is gen­er­ally treated with ice packs, immo­bi­liza­tion, and anti­in­flam­ma­tory med­ica­tions such as ibupro­fen (Advil, Motrin) or aspirin and may require local injec­tions of cor­ti­cos­teroids (cor­ti­sone med­ica­tion) as well as exer­cise ther­apy to develop the mus­cu­la­ture of the front of the thigh.
Knee Pain At A Glance

* The knee joint has three com­part­ments.
* Causes of knee pain include injury, degen­er­a­tion, arthri­tis, infre­quently infec­tion, and rarely bone tumors.
* Lig­a­ments within the knee (cru­ci­ate lig­a­ments) and on the inner and outer sides of the knee (col­lat­eral lig­a­ments) sta­bi­lize the joint.
* Sur­gi­cal repair of lig­a­ment injury can involve sutur­ing, graft­ing, and syn­thetic graft repair.
* Rou­tine X-rays do not reveal menis­cus tears but can be used to exclude other prob­lems of the bones and other tis­sues.
* The knee joint is the most com­monly involved joint in rheumatic dis­eases, which are immune dis­eases that affect var­i­ous tis­sues of the body, includ­ing the joints, to cause arthritis.

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