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Cheatography

Knee OA Cheat Sheet (DRAFT) by

Management, Presentation

This is a draft cheat sheet. It is a work in progress and is not finished yet.

Demogr­aphics

- Uncommon in young popula­tions
- Usually sympto­matic (1/3 in >65 years of age)
- Obesity (low grade inflam­mation in the joint)
- Women more than men

Causes

- Obesity
- Trauma­/prior surgery in the knee (within 5-15 years)
- Occupa­tio­ns/­act­ivities that exposes the knee to repetitive squatting, kneeling, pivoting, stair climbing
- Athletes in tennis, racque­tball, soccer, weight­lif­ting, dance, cycling, gymnas­tics, football
- Biomec­hanical deficits - Varus, Valgus, glut med weakness, pes planus

Presen­tation

- Mainly affects medial tibiof­emoral compar­tment then patell­ofe­moral and lateral compar­tments
- Older adult with gradual joint pain
- Provoked by activity , relieved by rest
- Described as a deep ache
- Morning stiffness that improves after >30 mins
- Pain worse with weather changes (barom­etric pressure - cool/damp weather)
- Difficulty with squatting, bending, stair climbing, prolonged walking - can acquire a limp
- Loss of ROM (can have severe limita­tion)
- Crepitus
- SHort Stride length
- Slower walking speed
- Poor balance
- May have fear avoidance behaviours
- Joint line pain and tenderness (medial compar­tment)
- +ve Valgus­/Varus stress test (insta­blity)
- Weak Quads
- Assess Get up and go test
- Assess hyperp­ron­ation of the foot and weakness of hip abductors and ext rots
- Iliopsoas and hip flexor tightness (prevents hip from working through a full ROM - increases stress to the knee)
- Gastro­cso­leus, thigh adductors, piriformis - assess for tightness
- Assess for posterior hip capsule tightness (inhibits normal knee mechanics - creates excessive anterior shear)
- Assess Lx and SIJ
- Assessed by WOMAC pain/f­unc­tional assessment

ACR Criteria

At least 3 of the 6 findings:
- Age >50 yo
- Morning stiffness for >30 mins
- Bony tenderness
- Bony enlarg­ement
- Crepitus
- No palpable warmth

Imaging

- Not usually required (patients can be asympt­omatic with x-ray findings)
- If diagnosis is uncertain , x-rays can be taken
- MRI if consid­ering meniscal tear, ligament sprain­/tear, AVN

DDx

- Meniscus injury
- Ligament sprain
- Bursitis
- Tendonitis (ITB/pes anserine tendons)
- AVN
- F#
- Infection
- Neoplasm
- RA
- Gout
- Pseudogout
- Psoriatic arthritis
- Lyme disease

Management

- Home exercises 2-3 times a week
- Knee extens­or/­quads streng­thening (Quad setting, dynamic ball wall squats, chair squats with band
- Glut med streng­thening - clam/p­ost­erior lunges
- Hip hinges
- Stretching of gastro­soleus, hamstring, ITB, Quads and thigh adductors
- Yoga/t­aichi
- Overweight patients - low impact aerobic exercise (biking, walking, ellipi­tical exercise, water walking, swimming)
- Axial manipu­lation + patella glide (severe cases/pts with assistive device >25% of the day should not be manipu­lated)
- Stretching of posterior hip capsule
- Ice massag­e/ice
- Myofascial release of tight muscul­ature
- Total knee replac­ement if unresp­onsive to conser­vative care