The menisci of the knee are two crescentic shaped cartilages found within the knee, situated between the ends of the femur and the tibia. There are two menisci in each knee; the medial meniscus and the lateral meniscus. They are wedge-shaped in cross-section and are made of elastic fibrocartilage, not too dissimilar to the outer part of the ear – almost like two potato wedges sandwiched between the bones.
In the past it was thought that the menisci were just the vestigial remnants of a muscle within the knee, and they were routinely excised completely in the presence of any kind of damage. There are still many patients around today with nice big scars on their knees, courtesy of previous open total meniscectomies. However, it is now recognised that the menisci have a number of very important functions within the knee:
Meniscal tears are the most common injury of the knee presenting to an Orthopaedic Surgeon. In younger patients, meniscal tears normally occur as a result of sports injuries, with the most common mechanism involving twisting on a loaded flexed knee with the knee then giving way. Typically, the giving way is then followed by pain and swelling in the knee. The most common sports associated with knee injuries of this kind are:
With age, the menisci degenerate and become less elastic, more friable and more liable to tearing. Degenerate meniscal tears may occur spontaneously, with no specific history of any one particular traumatic episode. Alternatively, degenerate meniscal tears may occur from simple movements such as squatting or getting up from kneeling.
The typical symptoms of a meniscal tear are:
A patient with a meniscal tear may not necessarily experience all of these symptoms, but can have any combination of the above.
If there are clinical signs of arthritis within the knee, then the appropriate investigation is to simply perform an X-ray.
In patients where the history and clinical examination are strongly suggestive of a meniscal tear, then the clinical diagnostic accuracy for determining meniscal tears without the need for any special investigations is approximately 90%, in the hands of an appropriately trained, qualified and experienced Orthopaedic Surgeon.
In patients where there may be doubt regarding the diagnosis, where there is a suspicion of potential alternative pathology or in cases where there has been major damage to the knee and where there may be multiple concomitant injuries such as ligament tears, then an MRI scan of the knee may be indicated.
MRI scans do give quite interesting and useful pictures of the knee. However, they are not 100% reliable, as the diagnostic accuracy of an MRI scan for a meniscal tear is only approximately 80 – 90%.
Some patients respond well to conservative treatment with rest, alteration of activities and physiotherapy. However, the menisci of the knee have very poor blood supplies and therefore they frequently fail to heal up. Despite this, if a patient’s symptoms are only relatively minor then potentially no further specific treatment may be required.
However, in those patients with significant ongoing symptoms, surgical treatment is indicated. Surgery is particularly indicated if a knee is repeatedly giving way, as each time the knee gives way there is the potential for further damage to be being caused. The surgical treatment of choice is to perform an arthroscopy of the knee (keyhole surgery). This is a relatively minor operation, performed under a general anaesthetic and normally lasting somewhere in the region of approximately half an hour.
In approximately 25% of younger patients, where a meniscal tear is found to be relatively simple, fresh and in the region of the cartilage around its outer edge where the blood supply is reasonable, it may be possible to perform meniscal repair using tiny devices comprising of anchors and sutures.
However, in the remaining 75% of younger patients plus in all those patients with ragged degenerate tears, the only appropriate option is to excise the torn tissue and trim the meniscus, which is known as a partial meniscectomy.
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