Understanding Red Flags in Patellofemoral Pain

Original Editor - Carin Hunter based on the course by Claire Robertson
Top Contributors - Carin Hunter, Jess Bell and Kim Jackson

Introduction[edit | edit source]

Why do we need to know red flags?

Safety

Directing patients to the right place

If there has been trauma to the knee - always make sure the correct imaging/investigations have been done.

Non-Traumatic Masquerading Conditions[edit | edit source]

Young people[edit | edit source]

Osgood Schlatters[edit | edit source]

11-15 years olds

prevalent in kids that do lots of quads dominant sports, so running, and kicking and jumping

obvious bump at the tibial tubercle

Pain specific to tibial tubercle

inflammation and elevation of the growth plates in the tibial tuberosity, so the proximal tibia

Can be confirmed on MRI to show level of inflammation

Pain worsen to a point that it can prevent any participation in sport

Treatment:Education

Activity modification - eliminate least fav sport, change playing position to a less active one to decrease load

NSAIDS

Ice Massage(Symptomatic relief)

Address overload

extrinsic

load management of sport

footwear

landing technique

intrinsic factors

muscle length

muscle strength

Osgood Schlatters.jpg

Sinding-Larsen-Johansson Disease[edit | edit source]

Adapted Sinding-Larsen-Johansson Syndrome - Shutterstock Image - ID 633281234.jpg

inflammation at the growth plate of the distal pole of the patella

most likely to be seen at times of aggressive growth/growth spurts

treatment tactics that I ask parents to do is to track growth because they're more likely to manage it well at times of aggressive growth with their activity modification.

Pain worsen to a point that it can prevent any participation in sport

Treatment:activity modification

Knee Effusion[edit | edit source]

A child should not have a knee effusion

Effusion very often leads to patellofemoral pain

A knee effusion in a child should always be investigated

Possible Causes:

systemic autoimmune disease, juvenile arthritis

infective arthritis

Osteochondritis Dissecans

Osteochondritis Dissecans/Osteochondral Defect[edit | edit source]

cartilage and some of the subchondral bone can break off and float in the joint, which irritates the synovium, which in turn causes the effusion

Autoimmune disease red flags:

Multiple joint involvement

Joint was stiff on waking

Fatigue

Infective arthritis red flags:

Temperature

Recent Illness

Osteochondritis Dissecans Treatment:

Possible debridement/knee washed out

Review, ideally, the OCDs, the osteochondral defects, with MRI. And what they're looking for there is how stable are the margins of the osteochondral defect and where are they? Are they in a very weight-bearing zone or not? And with respect to the stability, the margins, I think about it a bit like a divot on a golf course. So, sometimes you might have a really clean bit of grass, the soil has been removed, and it's not all crumbling in. So, that's a stable situation. And then we might have a divot on a golf course where the grass and soil has been removed and the soil is just crumbling in, and that would be an unstable OCD and there

Possible surgical resection ly they might need to resect back to a stable margin.

Monitor bone oedema around these defects, which over time, serially scanned, you're looking for those to decrease. So, from a

physiotherapy point of view, we're looking at load management. Understanding, for example, in the patellofemoral joint if we've got a trochlear OCD, then we're not going to be wanting to do lots of deep loaded flexion, for example. So, message there without a doubt, do not sit on a child with an effused knee

Always refer a child with a knee effusion for further investigations to establish an underlying cause

Slipped Capital Femoral Epiphysis[edit | edit source]

Others[edit | edit source]

Less common but more serious:Systemic Auto-Immune Disease

Slipped Epiphysis

FAI

Leukaemia

Metastatic Neuroblastoma

Primary Bone Tumour

Red Flags

Night pain

Weight loss

Malaise

PCL Rupture ==== Assessment Tools[edit | edit source]

Load Assessment Table for Growth Tracking - Track volume of exercise in a week

References[edit | edit source]