CODES
ICD9
- 112.3 Candidiasis of skin and nails
- 681.02 Onychia and paronychia of finger
- 681.9 Cellulitis and abscess of unspecified digit
ICD10
- B37.2 Candidiasis of skin and nail
- L03.019 Cellulitis of unspecified finger
- L03.039 Cellulitis of unspecified toe
PATELLAR INJURIES
Stacy M. Boore
•
Stephen R. Hayden
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
Dislocation
- Usually caused by sudden flexion and external rotation of tibia on femur, with simultaneous contraction of quadriceps muscle
- Direct trauma to patella is a less common cause
- Lateral dislocation of the patella is most common, with the patella displaced over the lateral femoral condyle
- Uncommon dislocations include superior, medial, and rare intra-articular dislocation
Fracture
- Direct trauma:
- Most common mechanism
- Direct blow or fall on patella
- Usually results in comminuted or minimally displaced fracture, or open injury
- Indirect forces:
- The result of excessive tension through the extensor mechanism during deceleration from a fall (can also cause patellar tendon rupture)
- Avulsion injury from sudden contraction of the quadriceps tendon
- Usually results in transverse or displaced fracture (often both)
- Types of patellar fractures:
- Transverse: 50–80% (usually middle or lower 3rd of patella)
- Comminuted (or stellate): 30–35%
- Longitudinal: 25%
- Osteochondral
Patellar Tendon Rupture
- Usually caused by forceful eccentric contraction of quadriceps muscle on a flexed knee during deceleration (e.g., jump landing and weight lifting)
- Often occurs in older athletes
- Microtrauma from repetitive activity
Patellar Tendinitis
- Overuse syndrome from repeated acceleration and deceleration (jumping, landing)
ETIOLOGY
Dislocation
- Risk factors for patellar dislocation:
- Genu valgum (knock-knee)
- Genu recurvatum (hyperextension of knee)
- Shallow lateral femoral condyle
- Deficient vastus medialis
- Lateral insertion of patellar tendon
- Shallow patellar groove
- Patella alta (high-riding patella)
- Deformed patella
- Pes planus (flatfoot)
- Common injury in adolescent athletes, especially girls
- The younger the patient at the time of initial dislocation, the greater the risk of recurrence
Fracture
- Male:female ratio 2:1
- Highest incidence in those 20–50 yr old
Patellar Tendon Rupture
- Peak incidence in 3rd and 4th decades:
- Risk factors:
- History of patellar tendinitis
- History of diabetes mellitus, previous steroid injections, rheumatoid arthritis, gout, systemic lupus erythematosus
- Previous major knee surgery
Patellar Tendinitis
- Microtears of tendon matrix from overuse
- Seen in high jumpers, volleyball and basketball players, runners
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
Dislocation
- History of feeling knee “go out”; popping, ripping, or tearing sensation
- Pain
- Inability to bear weight
- Obvious lateral deformity of patella
- Mild to moderate swelling
- Often reduces spontaneously before ED evaluation
- Tenderness along patella
- Positive apprehension test or Fairbanks sign:
- Attempts to push the patella laterally elicits patient apprehension
- Attempts to push patella medially do not
Fracture
- Pain over anterior knee
- Difficulty ambulating
- Increased pain with movement of patella
- Tenderness and swelling over patella
- Difficulty or inability to extend knee
- Palpable defect, crepitus, or joint effusion/hemarthrosis
Patellar Tendon Rupture
- Abrupt onset of severe pain
- Decreased ability to bear weight
- Occasionally hemarthrosis
- Proximally displaced patella
- Incomplete extensor function
- Inability to maintain knee extension against force
Patellar Tendinitis
- Pain in area of patellar tendon
- Pain worse from sitting to standing or going up stairs
- Point tenderness at distal aspect of patella or proximal patellar tendon
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
Radiographs essential
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Imaging
- Anteroposterior (AP), lateral, and sunrise views of the knee should be obtained, pre- and postreduction
- Postreduction radiographs help exclude osteochondral fracture (in patellar dislocations)
- Bipartite patella (patella with accessory bony fragment connected to main body by cartilage) may be mistaken for fracture:
- Comparison view may help differentiate
- For patellar tendon rupture, a high-riding patella (i.e., patella located superior to level of intercondylar notch) is observed
- For patellar tendinitis, radiographic findings unlikely with symptom duration of <6 mo
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
- Patellar subluxation
- Femoral or tibial fracture
- Traumatic bursitis
- Quadriceps tendon rupture
TREATMENT
PRE HOSPITAL
Patient should be transported in supine position with knee flexed and supported.
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
Appropriate history and physical exam to identify any associated injuries (e.g., femoral fracture, hip fracture, posterior hip dislocation) and assess extensor mechanism
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
Dislocation
- For simple lateral patellar dislocation, reduce dislocation by extending the knee gently to 180°:
- Occasionally, simultaneous pressure may have to be applied over the lateral aspect of patella in a medial direction
- For other types of patellar dislocation (superior, medial, intra-articular), do not attempt reduction; consult orthopedics
- Aspiration of hemarthrosis with sterile technique is necessary if reduction is difficult
- If osteochondral fracture is present (28–50% of cases), obtain orthopedic consultation
- Although reduction is typically easy to accomplish, procedural sedation or parenteral analgesia may facilitate it
- Conservative (nonoperative) management of dislocations leads to recurrent instability in 60% of patients, but there is no evidence to support operative care in primary dislocations
Fracture
- Orthopedic consultation when patellar fracture is confirmed
- Nondisplaced fractures with intact extensor mechanism are managed nonsurgically
- Initial treatment often consists of long-leg bulky splint and subsequent operative repair
Patellar Tendon Rupture
- Orthopedic consultation, with surgical repair within 2–6 wk
Patellar Tendinitis
- Rest, avoidance of inciting activity, heat, and NSAIDs
MEDICATION
- Fentanyl citrate: 0.5–1.5 μg/kg (peds: 0.5–1.0 μg/kg) IV
- Midazolam HCl: 1–2.5 mg (peds: 0.05–0.1 mg/kg, max. dose 6 mg) IV
- Morphine sulfate: 2–5 mg per dose (peds: 0.1–0.2 mg/kg per dose) IV
- Meperidine: 50–150 mg (peds: 1.1–1.8 mg/kg) IM q3–4h prn
- Ketorolac: 60 mg IM; 30 mg IV (peds: 0.5–1 mg/kg IV, max. 15 mg dose if <50 kg; max. 30 mg dose if >50 kg, IV)
- Methohexital: 1–1.5 mg/kg (1 mL q5sec) (peds: 0.5–1 mg IV) IV
- Propofol: 1–2 mg/kg IV (20 mg bolus q45sec) push slow IV to avoid dec BP (peds: 1 mg/kg not to exceed 40 mg))
FOLLOW-UP