Hip
Hip/Lumbar
Knee
More knee
patella
100

Describe the proximal and distal segments of the coxofemoral joint, what are the articulating surfaces and what are the ligaments?

proximal: 3 bones for os coxae: pubis, ischium, ilium, articulating surface is the labrum of the acetabulum and the transverse ligament connects the 2 inferior ends of the labrum

distal: the femoral head, the fovea is where the ligamentum teres attaches on the femoral head to supply blood to the femur head/neck

100

How will leaning toward the painful hip reduce the pain in gait? What other compensation would you consider?

With a cane on the opposite side, it helps to push the pelvis up to assist the Abductors of the hip 

A lateral lean DECREASES the moment arm of gravity 

100

When you flex/extend lumbar spine which way does the nucleus pulposus go?

Flexion: the sup. vertebral body pushes the nucleus pulposus posteriorly

Extension: the sup. vertebral body pushes the pulposus anteriorly

100

For the MCL, what is the primary role? What is the structure (attachments) and how does it influence the role? When is it at its strongest?

MCL limits VALGUS stress

It is taut in extension (strongest in knee extension)

Structure: broad, flat, long--> helps to resist valgus force, attaches to medial meniscus and continuous with joint capsule 

100

When are the primary ligaments at most risk for injury? (MCL, LCL, PCL, ACL)

MCL: from valgus force when knee flexed (strongest in knee extension)

LCL: varus force when knee flexed

ACL: knee flexed and a person twists on their knee 

PCL: knee extended?

200

What are abnormalities in the angle of inclination of the femoral head called? What about in the angle of torsion for the femur?

Abnormalities in angle of inclination: Normal inclination is 125 degrees, the angle of inclination is between the longitudinal axis of the femoral shaft and the line of the femoral head and neck in frontal plane  

- coxa valga: > 125 degrees

- coxa valga: < 125 degrees

Abnormalities in the angle of torsion: angle of torsion is in between the femoral condyles and the line of the femoral head and shaft in the transverse plane, normal is 8-15 degrees

- Anteversion: pathological INCREASE in the angle of torsion, > 15 degrees

- Retroversion: pathological DECREASE in the angle of torsion, < 15 degrees 

200

How will coxa valga, coxa vara and femoral anteversion affect gluteus medius strength?

Coxa Valga: The moment arm will decrease so there will be less force available for the gluteus medius 

Coxa Vara: The moment arm will increase so the gluteus medius will have the ability to be stronger (if everything else is the same)

Anteversion: The moment arm will decrease????

200

Describe the menisci, including shape, attachments and function. Which ligaments attach to the medial meniscus and lateral meniscus?

Role: improves joint congruency, shock absorption and decreases friction 

Shape: borders thick, centers thin

- Medial meniscus: C shaped

- Lateral meniscus: O shaped

Attachments: medial has more ligamentous and capsular restraints then lateral meniscus, BOTH menisci are attached indirectly or directly to the patella by the patellomeniscal ligament, Medial meniscus is firmly attached to the medial joint capsule by the MCL, Medial meniscus also attaches to the ACL and PCL, Lateral meniscus inserts on the tibia and the PCL and medial femoral condyle via meniscofemoral ligament 

200

For the LCL, what is the primary role? What is the structure (attachments) and when is it strongest?

LCL resists VARUS forces and lateral rotation

There is NO attachment to lateral meniscus, it is outside of the joint capsule, attaches to fibular head 

Relaxed in flexion, taut in extension (strongest here)

200

What function does the patella serve at the knee joint? How should the patella track?

Patella increases the moment arm of the quads- anatomical pulley, without it there would be no moment arm for the quads

During extension: the patella travels upward and moves from a lateral to medial position

300

What is the function of the hip joint capsule and ligaments?

Hip joint capsule function: osteokinematics (flexion, extension, abduction, adduction, IR, ER) and arthrokinematics

- anterior/superior part: thick

- posterior/inferior part: thin

Hip joint ligaments:

- Iliofemoral (Y ligament): attaches to AIIS and greater trochanter, checks hip extension

- Pubofemoral: attached to superior ramus of pubis and intertrochanteric fossa, checks extension

- Ischiofemoral: originates on posterior side (acetabular labrum) but wraps around to anterior side (greater trochanter) , also checks extension 

300

You observe your patient during a single leg stance on the left/ Your patients right pelvis drops approx. 2 inches compared to the left. Which muscles/side are weak?

Left gluteus medius 

300

Describe the arthrokinematics within the knee joint as the femur moves from full extension to full flexion (closed chain).

Femur (convex) is moving on the tibia (concave) 

Femur roles posteriorly and tibia glides anteriorly 

300
What is the role of the ACL? What are the names of the 2 bundles/where are they most useful? Where does the ACL attach?

Role: restrains anterior tibial translation (best in extension) and hyperextension, also resists rotation when knee is slightly flexed 

2 bundles: PLB (posterior lateral bundle): full extension, AMB (anterior medial bundle): increased flexion

Attaches to LATERAL CONDYLE medial portion of the femur and center of the tibia at the intercondylar ridge 

300
Is the patella equally effective at all points in the knee ROM? 
Mid range- patella most effective

Full ext/flex- patella least effective 

400

What is the position of max congruency at the hip? What is the closed pack position of the hip? What position is the joint at greatest risk for dislocation? 

Max congruence: flexion, abduction and ER

Closed pack position: extension, IR, slight abduction 

Highest risk for dislocation: with the leg straight and hip adducted????

400

What is sacral nutation and what are the movements involved in sacral nutation? What about sacral counternutation?

Nutation: Posterior pelvic tilt, nutation of sacrum (top of sacrum tilts down, tail of sacrum comes upwards), hip extends, lumbar spine flexes

Counter nutation: anterior pelvic tilt, counter nutation (top of sacrum tilts backwards, tail goes inward), hip flexes, lumbar spine extends 

400

What is terminal knee extension? What are the structures involved?

At the very end of knee extension, there is slight external rotation at the knee, the knee is then said to be in a "locked" position


The popliteus muscle can "unlock" the knee to bring it out of knee extension

400

What is the role of the PCL? What are the bundles and where are they most useful? Where does it attach?

Role: restrains posterior tibial translation

Bundles: ALB (anterolateral bundle): increased flexion, PMB (posterior medial bundle): full extension and deep squat

Structure: has a large surface area of attachment--> more stability, attaches from posterior portion of the tibia to the lateral side of the MEDIAL CONDYLE 

400

Which facet of the patella is likely to undergo excessive degeneration? For example squatting down a lot in your job could cause damage to....

medial and lateral facets experience the most degeneration

500

What is the PROM generally available to the hip in flexion, extension, abduction, adduction, IR and ER? What structures limit each motion?

Flexion: 120 degrees, limiting structures for PROM: tight hip extensor muscles

Extension: 20 degrees, limiting structures for PROM: the 3 hip ligaments, tight hip flexor muscles

Abduction: 45 degrees, limiting structures for PROM: tight hip adductors

Adduction: 20 degrees, limiting structures for PROM: tight hip abductors 

IR: 45 degrees, limiting structures for PROM: tight hip ER

ER: 45 degrees, limiting structures for PROM: tight hip IR

500

What muscles are involved in anterior pelvic tilt? What about posterior pelvic tilt?

Anterior: hip flexors (psoas), erector spinae

Posterior: abdominals, hamstrings 

500

What happens to the menisci during knee motion?

the meniscus takes on a lot of load during knee motion so it is absorbing the load and also helping joint congruency/lubrication

If the meniscus is not there, the loads will increase on a smaller surface area which may disrupt hyaline cartilage 

500

What are the posterior capsular ligaments of the knee? What do they restrict?

Oblique popliteal ligament and arcuate ligament 

Both resist hyperextension

500

Describe patella alta/baja.

Patella alta: increase in length of patellar ligament, the patella rides high--> increases risk for instability

Patella baja: decrease in length of patellar ligament, patella rides lower