If the joint remains dislocated, reduction and splinting is indicated;[4] this is typically carried out under procedural sedation.[2] If signs of arterial injury are present, immediate surgery is generally recommended.[3] Multiple surgeries may be required.[4] In just over 10% of cases, an amputation of part of the leg is required.[4]
Knee dislocations are rare, occurring in about 1 per 100,000 people per year.[3] Males are more often affected than females.[2] Younger adults are most often affected.[2] Descriptions of this injury date back to at least 20 BC by Meges of Sidon.[9]
Signs and symptoms
Symptoms include knee pain.[2] The joint may also have lost its normal shape and contour.[2] A joint effusion may, or may not, be present.[2]
About half are the result of major trauma, the other half as a result of minor trauma.[3] Major trauma may include mechanisms such as falls from a significant height, motor vehicle collisions, or a pedestrian being hit by a motor vehicle.[2] Cases due to major trauma often have other injuries.[5]
Minor trauma may include tripping while walking or while playing sports.[2] Risk factors include obesity.[2]
Plain X-rays, CT scan, ultrasonography, or MRI may help with the diagnosis.[2][11] Findings on X-ray that may be useful among those who have already reduced include a variable joint space, subluxation of the joint, or a Segond fracture.[5]
If the ankle–brachial pressure index (ABI) is less than 0.9, CT angiography is recommended.[3] Standard angiography may also be used.[2] If the ABI is greater than 0.9 repeated physical exams over the next 24 hours to verify good blood flow may be sufficient.[2][11] The ABI is calculated by taking the systolic blood pressure at the ankle and dividing it by the systolic blood pressure in the arm.[2] More recently, the FAST-D protocol, using ultrasound to assess the posterior tibial and dorsalis pedis arteries for a ‘tri-phasic wave pattern’, has been shown to be reliable in ruling out significant arterial injury.[8]
Classification
They may be divided into five types: anterior, posterior, lateral, medial, and rotatory.[4] This classification is based on the movement of the tibia with respect to the femur.[11] Anterior dislocations, followed by posterior, are the most common.[2] They may also be classified on the basis of which ligaments are injured.[2]
Treatment
Initial management is often based on Advanced Trauma Life Support.[5] If the joint remains dislocated reduction and splinting is indicated.[4] Reduction can often be done with simple traction after the person has received procedural sedation.[11] If the joint cannot be reduced in the emergency department, then emergency surgery is recommended.[2]
In those with signs of arterial injury, immediate surgery is generally carried out.[3] If the joint does not stay reduced external fixation may be needed.[2] If the nerves and artery are intact the ligaments may be repaired after a few days.[11] Multiple surgeries may be required.[4] In just over 10% of cases an amputation of part of the leg is required.[4]
Epidemiology
Knee dislocations are rare: they represent about 1 in 5,000 orthopedic injuries,[5] and about 1 knee dislocation occurs annually per 100,000 people.[3] Males are more often affected than females, and young adults the most often.[2]
^ abcdefghijklmnopMaslaris A, Brinkmann O, Bungartz M, Krettek C, Jagodzinski M, Liodakis E (August 2018). "Management of knee dislocation prior to ligament reconstruction: What is the current evidence? Update of a universal treatment algorithm". European Journal of Orthopaedic Surgery & Traumatology. 28 (6): 1001–1015. doi:10.1007/s00590-018-2148-4. PMID29470650. S2CID3482099.
^ abcdefPallin DJ, Hockberger R, Gausche-Hill M (2018). "50. Knee and lower leg". In Walls RM (ed.). Rosen's Emergency Medicine – Concepts and Clinical Practice E-Book (9th ed.). Philadelphia: Elsevier Health Sciences. p. 618. ISBN978-0-323-35479-0.