Knee Dislocation
Epidemiology
- More common in males
- Morbid obesity is a risk factor
Etiology/pathophysiology
- High energy trauma – e.g. motor vehicle accident, crush injury, fall from height
- Results in axial load to a flexed knee
- Low energy trauma – e.g. routine activity in a morbidly obese patient
- Anterior dislocations – caused by hyperextension injuries
- Posterior dislocations – caused by posteriorly directed force across the proximal tibia
- Associated injuries – vascular injury; nerve injury (common peroneal nerve); fractures; soft tissue injuries (patellar tendon rupture, displaced menisci)
Anatomy
- Articulations of the knee – tibiofemoral, patellofemoral, tibiofibular
- Ligaments – main stabilisers of the knee
- Anterior cruciate (ACL) – controls rotation and forward movement of the tibia
- Posterior cruciate (PCL) – controls backward movement of the tibia
- Medial collateral (MCL) – gives stability to the inner knee
- Lateral collateral (LCL) – gives stability to the outer knee
- Blood supply – from the anastomses of the 6 genicular arteries
- Descending genicular artery (GA) – branch of femoral artery
- 2 superior GA, 1 middle GA, and 2 inferior GA – branches of the popliteal artery
Classification – Kennedy Classification (based on direction of displacement of the tibia)
- Anterior (most common) – due to hyperextension injury
- Involves tear of PCL
- Highest incidence of peroneal nerve injury
- Posterior – due to axial load on flexed knee (dashboard injury)
- Highest incidence of vascular injury – complete tear of popliteal artery
- Lateral – due to valgus force
- Involves tear of collaterals and cruciates
- Medial – due to varus force
- Involves tear of collaterals and cruciates
- Rotational – usually reducible
Clinical features
- Knee pain and instability
- Absence of deformity – 50% spontaneously reduce
- Deformity – ‘dimple sign’ indicates irreducible posterolateral dislocation
- Absent/diminished pulses – indicates arterial injury
Diagnosis
- Anterior drawer test – to detect injury in ACL
- Patient is supine, hips flexed 45o, knees flexed 90o, examiner tries to shift the tibia anteriorly at the joint line
- Positive test – a higher degree of anterior displacement when compared to contralateral knee
- Posterior drawer test – to detect injury in PCL (similar method, but tibia is displaced posteriorly)
- X-ray
- CT/MRI
Treatment
- Emergent closed reduction followed by vascular assessment (orthopaedic emergency)
- If pulses are absent following reduction
- Immobilisation – if there is successful closed reduction without vascular compromise
- Persistent loss in ROM in the long term
- Open reduction – for irreducible knee; posterolateral dislocation; vascular injury
- External fixation
- Delayed ligamentous reconstruction – for knee instability after immobilisation
Patella Fracture
Epidemiology
- More common in males
- 20-50 year olds
Etiology/pathophysiology
- Direct trauma – from fall or dashboard injury
- Usually results in a comminuted fracture
- Indirect eccentric contraction – due to rapid knee flexion against a contracted quadriceps muscle
- Usually results in a transverse fracture, splitting the patella into two (two-part fracture)
Anatomy
- Osteology
- Largest Sesamoid bone in the body
- The posterior articular surface is comprised of medial and lateral facets (lateral facet is larger)
- Superior 3/4 of the posterior surface is covered by articular cartilage
- Soft tissue attachments
- Quadriceps tendon and fascia lata is attached to the antero-superior margin
- Quadriceps tendon is composed of three layers – superior, middle, deep
- Patellar tendon is attached to the inferior margin
- Quadriceps tendon and fascia lata is attached to the antero-superior margin
- Blood supply – from the anastomses of the 6 genicular arteries (see above)
Classification – based on fracture pattern
- Nondisplaced
- Displaced
- Transverse
- Pole/sleeve – can be upper or lower
- Vertical
- Marginal
- Osteochondral
- Comminuted
Clinical features
- Pain and swelling over the knee
- Ecchymosis
- Haemarthrosis
- Patient cannot lift the leg in full extension
- Crepitus – in a comminuted fracture
Diagnosis
- X-ray
- Patella alta – high riding patella; indicates disruption of the patellar tendon
- Patella baja – low riding patella; indicates disruption of the quadriceps tendon
- CT/MRI
Treatment
- Knee immobilised in extension – if extensor mechanism is intact; fracture is non/minimally displaced; vertical fracture
- ORIF – if there is extensor mechanism failure; open fractures; sleeve fracture
- Partial patellectomy – for comminuted superior/inferior pole fracture
- Total patellectomy – only for severely comminuted fractures where the patella is unable to be salvaged
Tibial Plateau Fractures
Epidemiology
- Bimodal age distribution – males in their 40s; females in their 70s
- Common locations – lateral condyle > bicondylar > medial condyle
Etiology/pathophysiology
- Mechanisms
- Varus or valgus load with or without axial load
- High energy trauma – motor vehicle accidents, sports injuries (younger patients)
- Low energy trauma – falls (older patients)
- Most common fracture patterns
- Younger patients – splitting fractures
- Older/osteoporotic patients – depression fractures
- Fractures of the lateral plateau are more common than the medial plateau
- Associated conditions
- Damage to cruciate and collateral ligaments
- Meniscal tears
- Compartment syndrome
- Vascular injury
Anatomy
- Lateral tibial plateau – convex in shape
- Medial tibial plateau – concave in shape
Classification – Schatzker Classification
- I – lateral plateau split fracture without depression
- II – lateral plateau split fracture with depression
- III – lateral pure depression fracture
- IV – medial plateau fracture
- V – bicondylar plateau fracture
- VI – bicondylar fracture with a dislocation of the metaphysis from the diaphysis
Clinical feature
- Pain and swelling
- Inability to bear weight
- Bruising, haemarthrosis
- Reduced knee range of movement
Diagnosis
- X-ray – depressed articular surface, sclerotic band of bone (indicates compression), abnormal joint alignment
- CT/MRI
Treatment
- Hinged knee brace – for minimally displaced fractures
- ORIF – for all medial plateau fractures; fractures with condylar widening; bicondylar fractures