Knee dislocation
| Knee dislocation | |
|---|---|
| Plain lateral X-ray of the left knee showing a posterior knee dislocation | |
| Specialty | Orthopedic surgery |
| Symptoms | Knee pain, knee deformity |
| Complications | Injury to the artery behind the knee, compartment syndrome |
| Types | Anterior, posterior, lateral, medial, rotatory |
| Causes | Trauma |
| Diagnostic method | Based on history of the injury and physical examination, supported by medical imaging |
| Differential diagnosis | Femur fracture, tibial fracture, patellar dislocation, ACL tear |
| Treatment | Reduction, splinting, surgery |
| Prognosis | 10% risk of amputation |
| Frequency | 1 per 100,000 per year |
A knee dislocation is an injury in which there is disruption of the knee joint between the tibia and the femur. Symptoms include pain and instability of the knee. Complications may include injury to an artery, most commonly the popliteal artery behind the knee, or compartment syndrome.
About half of cases are the result of major trauma and about half as a result of minor trauma. About 50% of the time, the joint spontaneously reduces before arrival at hospital. Typically there is a tear of the anterior cruciate ligament, posterior cruciate ligament, and either the medial collateral ligament or lateral collateral ligament. If the ankle–brachial pressure index is less than 0.9, CT angiography is recommended to detect blood vessel injury. Otherwise repeated physical exams may be sufficient. More recently, the FAST-D protocol, assessing the posterior tibial and dorsalis pedis arteries for a ‘tri-phasic wave pattern’ with ultrasound, has been shown to be reliable in ruling out significant arterial injury.
If the joint remains dislocated, reduction and splinting is indicated; this is typically carried out under procedural sedation. If signs of arterial injury are present, immediate surgery is generally recommended. Multiple surgeries may be required. In just over 10% of cases, an amputation of part of the leg is required.
Knee dislocations are rare, occurring in about 1 per 100,000 people per year. Males are more often affected than females. Younger adults are most often affected. Descriptions of this injury date back to at least 20 BC by Meges of Sidon.