суббота, 1 декабря 2012 г.

Knee Anatomy


  

Understanding knee anatomy, and the structures that make up the knee can help with injury prevention, as well as your injury treatment.
The knee is one of the most commonly injured joints in the body during sports activities. From ACL tears, to meniscus tears, knee injuries can often effect your ability to participate in sports.
Bones of the Knee

Knee anatomy starts with the bones making up your knee joint. Your knee is a hinge type joint that allows for the movements of flexion (bending) and extension (straightening) of the leg.
Your knee joint is made up of two bones, the femur (thigh bone) and the tibia (shin bone). These two bones touch each other and make up the tibio-femoral joint.
Another important joint in your knee is the patello-femoral joint. This is the articulation between the patella (knee-cap) and the femur. The patella is a small bone that is actually inside the quadriceps tendon, and helps provide extra leverage for the quadriceps muscles when straightening the knee. Both the tibio-femoral and patello-femoral joints are commonly injured in sports activities.
Ligaments of the Knee

Ligaments are connective tissue that connects bones to other bones, and are an important part of knee anatomy.
There are four major ligaments in your knee. The medial collateral ligament (MCL), the lateral collateral ligament (LCL), the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL), and the posterior cruciate ligament (PCL).
The MCL and LCL are on the inside and outside of your knee, and help to keep your knee from moving from side to side. The ACL and PCL are inside of your knee joint, running between the femur and the tibia. They help to keep your tibia from moving out from under your femur. The ACL and PCL cross over each other inside the joint, which is how they get there names. (cruciate = to cross).

The joint capsule is another connective tissue structure that surrounds your knee joint. Out of the major ligaments, the ACL and MCL are the most commonly injured with sports activities.
Cartilage of the Knee

Another important part of knee anatomy is the cartilage. There are two types of cartilage within your knee joint, fibrocartilage and articular cartilage.
The fibrocartilage in your knee is called the meniscus, and there are two pieces, the medial meniscus and the lateral meniscus.
The meniscus is a thick, dense connective tissue that sits between your tibia and femur. It helps to provide shock absorption and cushion for your tibia and femur, as well as making your knee joint more congruent.
Articular cartilage is a hard and very slick surface that lines the ends of the bones where they articulate, or touch each other. This helps to reduce friction between your bones during movement.
Meniscus tears are common sports injuries, and are often caused by twisting your knee.
Muscles of the Knee
The last major area of knee anatomy include the muscles.
There are many muscles that surround your knee joint. The thigh muscles, or quadriceps, are a group of four muscles that start at your hip, and extend down the front of your upper leg, inserting into the patellar tendon on the tibia, just below your kneecap. The quads straighten your knee out when you contract them.
The hamstrings, or muscles on the back of your thigh, are a group of three muscles that start at your hip and extend down the back of your upper leg. They insert on both the medial and lateral sides of your leg, just below the knee joint. The hamstrings bend your knee when you contract them.
Other muscles run along the inside and outside of your upper leg, and help to produce movement of the leg. These include: tensor fascia lattae, gracilis, sartorius, and the adductor group.
Tendons of the Knee

Tendons are connective tissue that attach muscles to bones. All muscles have tendons at their ends.
The most important tendons in your knee are the patellar tendon, which extends from your patella (knee-cap) to your tibia, and the ilio-tibial band, which is the tendon for the tensor fascia lattae muscle, and runs along the outside of your upper leg, inserting on the fibula and tibia. These two tendons are commonly injured in sports activities.
Summary
All of the muscles, tendons, bones, ligaments, and cartilage work together to keep your knee functioning correctly. Understanding knee anatomy is the best start for preventing and treating knee injuries.
http://www.sports-injury-info.com/knee-anatomy.html

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