history (knee joint)
Last reviewed 01/2018
The following topics are helpful when asking about knee problems:
- the patient's age and sex
- pain:
- site, radiation, quality, duration, exacerbating and relieving factors
- attempt to distinguish between mechanical pain - often well-localised, and inflammatory or degenerative pain which is more diffuse
- trauma:
- any history of previous injury to the affected knee
- note the degree of force and its direction
- stiffness
- swelling:
- particularly time of onset in relation to injury: haemarthroses occur immediately, whilst post traumatic effusions later
- locking:
- inability to fully extend the knee. May be due to the catching of a torn meniscus.
- ask the patient to show the position the knee is in when it locks
- ask how locking is produced and relieved
- giving way:
- when going down stairs or when jumping from a height, indicative of patellar dislocation, cruciate ligament tears, loss of full knee extension, and quadriceps wasting
- upon twisting or walking upon uneven ground, indicative of meniscal injuries
- deformity:
- genu varus or valgus
- functional impairment:
- stairs
- walking distance
- home circumstances