Congenital Knee Dislocation

Epidemiology

 

Rare 

- 2:100 000

- 1/100 as common as DDH

- 1/3 bilateral 

- F:M 2:1

 

Associations

 

45% DDH

30% CTEV

 

Larsen Syndrome

Down's Syndrome

Arthrogryposis

 

Aetiology

 

Unknown

 

Two Theories

1. Intra-uterine packaging defect

2. Quadriceps intrinsic contracture / fibrosis

 

Pathology

 

Knee hyperextended 

- tibia dislocated anterior to the femur

 

Also

- quadriceps are tight

- absent cruciates

- patella hypoplastic or absent 

- patella alta

- valgus deformity

- hamstrings act as extensors

 

Classification

 

Type 1 

- can passively flex to 90°

- Subluxation / Hyperextension are minimal

 

Type 2

- can flex to 45°

- Moderate subluxation

 

 

Type 3

- -90 to 10o flexion

- complete dislocation

- no contact

 

DDx

 

Congenital Recurvatum of the Knee

- similar condition, but knee located 

- hyperextension is correctable, but flexion is limited

- splint knee to increase flexion

- KFO to maintain flexion

- good prognosis

 

Management

 

Non operative

 

Type 1

 

Attempt closed reduction & Pavlik harness

 

Type 2 & 3

 

Gentle MUA & serial casting

 

Once 90o, Pavlik harness 3/12

 

If DDH as well

- reduce knee first

- usually splint from foot to hip till 45° flexion 

- then Pavlik

 

Operative Management

 

Indication

 

Failure non-op treatment

 

Surgery often in syndrome e.g. arthrogryposis

 

Technique

 

Open reduction at 6/12 of age

- quadriceps engthening via anterior approach

- anterior capsulotomy / capsulectomy to reduce tibia onto femur

 

Ligamentous instability later very common