MS Exam 2: Knee

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What is the anterior drawer test used for? How is it performed?

ACL injury flex knee 90 degrees sit on patients foot to stabilize Grasp patients posterior knee palpate anterior surface of the tibia with one or both thumbs provide a firm anterior pull to the knee assess for ligamentous laxity and quality of end feel

A normal quadriceps angle is between __ and ___ degrees.

10-15

Quadriceps cross-sectional area are about __ larger than the hamstrings.

2x

Peak torque in knee flexion occurs around ___ to ___ degrees.

45-60 degrees

Quadriceps peak torque is about ___ to ___ degrees.

45-70 degrees

Most rotation of the knee is available at ___ degrees.

90 degrees *lateral 0-20 degrees medial 0-15 degrees

MYTH: Individuals with knee pain should decrease their PA, since this places added pressure on joints and can exacerbate the issue. Why is this a myth?

Can be true, but we know of ways that we can decrease stress with different exercises thinking about where the line of gravity falls through the joint, and minimizing the moment arm

____ between the patella and femur changes throughout ROM.

Congruence (contact)

What is the valgus stress test used for?

MCL injury Hold ankle of involved limb with outside hand opposite hand placed over the medial joint line of the involved limb knee flexed 20-30 degrees apply valgus force by abducting the tibia and stabilizing the thigh test is repeated in full extension

MYTH: Weight bearing exercises are better after ACL reconstruction. Open-chain (e.g., leg extension) exercises should due to increased strain on ACL. Why is this a myth?

Open chain exercises can be less strain than doing a full squat, but later on we actually need to increase stress for them to get back to normal activity.

The ACL provides the primary restraint to....

anterior translation of tibia on femur

The anterior cruciate ligament are consisted of 2 bands: ____ and ____

anteromedial and posterolateral bands

What are the consequences of a meniscectomy?

arthritis breakdown of articular cartilage can't distribute forces appropriately

Medial and lateral rotation of the knee is permitted by....

articular incongruence and ligament laxity

The medial collateral ligament is lax as you flex the knee, but provides more support. Why?

because of the lateral rotation

The knee joint lateral rotator muscle is the:

bicep femoris

In a bilateral stance, the ground reaction force passes from the ____ to the ____.

center of ankle to center of hip joint *forces distributed about equally between medial and lateral condyles

On the femur, the condyles are ____.

convex

After a meniscectomy, the contact area in the tibiofemoral joint is ____, resulting in more stress on the ____.

decreased articular cartilage (2x femur, 6-7x tibial plateau)

What structures provide passive support of the medial aspect of the joint capsule?

deep and superficial MCL

The tibiofemoral joint is a ____ type joint and has ___ degrees of motion.

double condyloid joint 3 DoF (flexion/extension, medial lateral rotation, abduction/adduction) *mainly moves like a hinge joint

The joint capsule of the knee provides stability by restricting...

excessive joint motion *reflexive muscular response

Quadriceps ____ the knee, but provides ____ control during knee flexion.

extends the knee eccentric control

The posterolateral band of the ACL is taut in ___.

extension

The posteromedial bundle of the PCL is taut with ____.

extension

During non-weight bearing exercise, the quadriceps must generate more torque as the knee approaches full ____.

extension *increasing moment arm of the resistance

The lateral collateral ligament is ___capsular.

extracapsular (separate from joint capsule)

In normal tibiofemoral alignment, the femur is _____ and the tibia is _____.

femur is oblique and directed inferiorly and medially tibia is almost vertical

The menisci is a ______ disc.

fibrocartilaginous

Movement is described relative to ___ segment.

fixed segment

The tibia is relatively ___, but slightly ____.

flat, slightly convex

During weight bearing exercise, the quadriceps must generate more torque as the knee ____.

flexes *increasing moment arm at knee joint (distance from GRF)

THe anterolateral bundle of the PCL is taut with ___.

flexion

The anteromedial band of the ACL is taut in ___.

flexion

The medial collateral ligament has a ____ supply, which means it has the capacity to...

good blood supply capacity to heal

The knee joint flexor muscles are the:

hamstrings (semitendinosus, semimembranosus, biceps femoris) sartorius gracilis popliteus gastroc plantaris

What structure provide passive support of the lateral aspect of the joint capsule?

iliotibial band

What are the functions of the menisci?

improve tibiofemoral congruence (forms concavities for femoral condyles and increases contact area) distributes weight bearing forces (50-70% load) reduce friction proprioception

Patellofemoral joint forces continue to ____ as you go from 0-90 degrees of knee flexion, which also results in ____ contact area.

increase increased

The patella ____ the moment arm of the quadriceps.

increases *by increasing the distance of the quad tendon and patellar tendon (ligament) from the axis of the knee joint *if someone does not have a patella, the have to produce more force of their quads because of their shorter moment arm

In the patellofemoral joint, progressive flexion to 90 degrees increases contact area ___ to ____.

inferior to superior

The anterolateral ligament provides a primary restraint to the...

internal rotation of the tibia

The ACL and PCL are ___capsular, but ___synovial.

intracapsular extrasynovial.

During tibiofemoral flexion, small amounts of anteroposterior displacements occur due to...

joint incongruence and variations in ligamentous elasticity *axis of rotation is not fixed *not a perfect sphere

Patellofemoral joint forces can be influenced by...

knee angle quadriceps tension *large joint forces or small contact area

The ACL provides a secondary restraint for knee _____, ____ and ____.

knee hyperextension, varus, and valgus

During neutral femur/tibia alignment, weight bearing line (ground reaction force) passes through....

knee joint center, relatively equal loading

During genu valgum, there is greater loading in the ____ compartment.

lateral

The ___ meniscus covers a greater portion of the smaller tibial surface.

lateral

Quadriceps have a slight ____ pull.

lateral pull

The Screw Home (locking) mechanism explains the obligatory _____ of the tibia with knee extension.

lateral rotation *opposite occurs with flexion (medial rotation) *the shorter lateral tibial plateau and lateral femoral condyle completes the rolling motion before the longer medial structures

The lateral collateral ligament provides a secondary restraint to excessive...

lateral rotation of the tibia

Excessive motion in the knee may indicate....

ligamentous laxity or instabilty

Why is the knee unable to rotate in full extension?

maximum congruence of the joint (closed pack)

During genu varum, there is greater loading in the ___ compartment.

medial

The ___ meniscus has more ligamentous and capsular restraints.

medial

During medial/lateral rotation of the knee, the ___ compartment is the axis of rotation.

medial *medial meniscus reduces friction

In a unilateral stance, thr ground reaction force passes through the ___ compartment.

medial *creates more torque through medial aspect

The ___ meniscus is C-shaped, and the ___ meniscus is 4/5 of a circle.

medial lateral

The ___ aspect of the patellofemoral joint has larger forces, and can reach ____ body weight with running and jumping.

medial 5-6x body weight

Why is medial compartment knee OA more common than lateral?

medial compartment is the center of rotation more forces fall in the medial compartment during unilateral stance

On the femur, the ___ condyle extends further distally than the ___ condyle.

medial extends further than lateral

The ___ tibial plateau is larger relative to the ____ tibial plateau.

medial is larger than lateral

What 2 structures provide passive support of the anterior aspect of the joint capsule?

medial patellofemoral ligament (MPFL) and lateral retinacula (deep layer)

On the tibia, the ____ improves joint congruence.

menisci

MYTH: Running can increase the risk of developing knee OA. Why is this a myth?

more force through knee joint doesn't mean you will develop OA sitting on the couch can also increase risk

During closed chain extension, the glide occurs in the ___ direction of the moving segment (femur).

opposite *convex is moving on concave

In menisci, the _____ portion has neurovascular supply, and the ___ portion relies on diffusion of synovial fluid for nutrient exchange.

outer 1/3 (decreases with age) central portion (requires intermittent loading)

___ is the largest sesamoid bone in the body

patella

Menisci is thicker along the ____.

periphery

The knee joint medial rotator muscles are:

popliteus semimembranosus semitendinosus sartorius gracilis

In the synovial layer, the ____ aspect of the joint is separate from the fibrous joint capsule.

posterior

What 2 structures provide passive support of the posterior aspect of the joint capsule?

posterior oblique ligament and arcuate ligament

The PCL provides primary restraint to...

posterior tibial translation on the femur *able to withstand forces furing knee flexion

The posterior cruciate ligament is consisted of 2 bands: ____ and ____

posteromedial and anterolateral bands

The patella acts as an anatomical ___, and increases ability of muscle to generate ____.

pulley torque

The glut max is a weight bearing secondary knee extensor by...

pulling the femur posteriorly *posterior shear requires co-contraction of other muscles

The soleus is a weight bearing secondary knee extensor by...

pulling the tibia posteriorly

The knee joint extensor muscles are the:

quadriceps (rectus femoris, vastus medialis/lateralis/intermedius)

During open chain extension of the knee, the glide occurs in the ____ direction of the moving segment (tibia).

same *concave is moving on convex

The anterolateral ligament is a ____ of the lateral joint capsule, and attaches to the ____.

thickening lateral meniscus

On the tibia, the articular cartilage is thicker on the ____ tibial plateau relative to the ___ tibial plateau.

thicker on lateral than medial

What joints make up the knee?

tibiofemoral and patellofemoral

An osteotomy is the surgical adding or removal of bone. What is the purpose of this? (knee)

to move the weight-bearing line to other compartment; redistribute the loads across the knee joint

The medial collateral ligament provides restraint to ___force, and ____rotation of the tibia.

valgus force lateral rotation

The PCL provides secondary restraint to knee __ and ___.

varus and valgus

The lateral collateral ligament provides restraint to ___force.

varus force

During knee extension, the vastus muscle group provides ___ of torque, and rectus femoris provides ___ of torque.

vastus - 80% RF - 20%

MYTH: You can selectively recruit the vastus medialis. Why is this a myth?

you just can't

What is genu verum?

*bow leg <175 degrees

What is genu valgum?

*knock knee > 185 degrees

What is dynamic valgus?

Hip internal rotation coupled with knee external rotation (knee collapses inward) *increased patellofemoral contact forces - potential pain generator *consistent mechanism of injury (PFPS, ACL, IT band)

How could you use both NWB and WB exercise types to address lower extremity weakness while initially minimizing knee joint loading/stress?

NWB: seated leg extension, adding resistance bands or weights to progress, TRX bands to unload, aquatic exercises WB: squats, sit to stands, mini squats (shorten ROM)

Non-weight bearing movement of the knee is when the ___ is moving on the fixed ____.

Non-weight bearing movement of the knee is when the tibia is moving on the fixed femur.

What interventions can be used to reduce loads across medial knee?

Strengthening hip abductors to stabilize and reduce load on medial knee Modifying gait Unloader brace Decrease gait velocity Lose weight Lateral wedge orthotic Bias the line of gravity towards lateral compartment (shorten moment arm) Cane - increase base of support

What is the Lachman's test use for? How is it performed?

Test for ACL injury stabilize anterior surface of distal femur flex knee 20-30 degrees place other hand on posterior surface of proximal tibia apply an anterior translatory force through the tibia

The joint capsule of the knee encloses the ____ and ___ joints, and is ____ to synovial lining.

The joint capsule of the knee encloses the tibiofemoral and patellofemoral joints, and is superficial to synovial lining. *large and lax

The lateral collateral ligament becomes taut in full knee ____, and becomes lax with knee ____.

The lateral collateral ligament becomes taut in full knee extension, and becomes lax with knee flexion.

The medial collateral ligament becomes taut in full knee ____, and becomes lax with knee ____.

The medial collateral ligament becomes taut in full knee extension, and becomes lax with knee flexion.

The ___ condyle is larger and has a greater radius of curvature than the ___ condyle.

The medial condyle is larger and has a greater radius of curvature than the lateral condyle.

Weight bearing movement of the knee is when the ___ is moving on the fixed ____.

Weight bearing movement of the knee is when the femur is moving on the fixed tibia.

The medial collateral ligament provides secondary restraint to...

anterior tibia translation and medial tibia rotation


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