Dislocated Knee Cap
Subscribe To Our FeedHave you ever imagined yourself not having knees?Your legs would be useless, no matter how shapely and nice they are to look at, if you had no knees.
The knee is a weight-bearing joint that connects the thigh and the leg to each other.
Normal daily functions of walking, sitting, standing, running and kicking can be performed because the role of the knee is to allow movement of the legs by flexing (bending) and extending (straightening).
Acute knee pain is described as severe pain that comes on suddenly and is usually the result of injury or infection, leaving us screaming for knee joint pain relief.
Some of the more common knee injuries and their signs and symptoms include the following:
Ligament Injuries:
When the tough bands of tissue that connect the thighbone (femur) and the lower leg bone (tibia and fibula) together, also known as ligaments, are torn as a result of a fall or contact trauma, most likely it will cause instant pain in the injured area.
Severe to mild discomfort will be the result. Pain is heightened when you walk or bend your knee.
Injuries To The Tendons:
Tendons are thick, fibrous cords that attach muscles to the bone.
Injury that causes the inflammation and irritation of one or more tendons of either one or both the knees brings about the condition of Tendinitis
The areas below the knee cap and at the front of the knee become swollen and are painful.
One will not be able to straighten the knee when tendons have been totally ruptured.
Meniscus Injuries:
This involves tears in the C-shaped cartilage that curves within your knee joint. It may hamper knee movement and cause your knee joint to lock so that you can’t extend it completely.
When this happens, the knee must be surgically treated.
Body Loose In Joint Space:
The floating of a broken off piece of injured or degenerated bone or cartilage in the joint space brings about the condition known as the lose body.
This may not create any problems unless the loose body interferes with knee joint movement — the effect is something like a pencil caught in a door hinge leading to pain and a locked joint.
Kneecap Dislocated:
This involves the slipping of the triangular bone that covers the front of your knee (patella) out of place, usually to the outside of your knee.
Dislocation is visible and your kneecap swings from side to side. Great difficulty and pain would be experienced when attempting to walk or straighten the knee. The whole affected area would be swollen.
Once a kneecap has been dislocated, there is greater risk of it happening again.
Osgood-Schlatter Disease:
Osgood-Schlatter Disease affects teens and preteens who are into active sports.
This overuse syndrome causes pain, swelling and tenderness at the bony prominence (tibial tuberosity) just below the kneecap and frequently affects just one knee, but may develop in both knees.
Hyperextended Knee:
Hyperextended Knee is an injury in which the knee extends beyond its normally straightened position, such that it bends back on itself.
Pain is experienced when an attempt is made to extend the knee. Swelling is also present even though the damage may be relatively minor. Partial and or complete ligament tear may result from a hyperextended knee.
For more information on how to cure knee pain or for knee joint pain relief please visit www.kneejointpainrelief.com
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