WOLTERS KLUWER HEALTH
January 14, 2021 – Orthopaedic surgeons have traditionally been taught that certain types of knee symptoms indicate damage to specialized structures called the menisci. But these “meniscal” and “mechanical” symptoms do not reflect what surgeons will find at knee arthroscopy, reports a study in The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery. The journal is published in the Lippincott portfolio in partnership with Wolters Kluwer.
Both types of symptoms are strongly related to the overall amount of cartilage damage in the knee joint – but not to the presence of meniscal tears, according to the new research by Elizabeth G. Matzkin, MD, and colleagues of Harvard Medical School. They write, “Our study adds strong evidence to refute the current dogma that meniscal pathology is the primary driver of traditionally defined ‘meniscal’ and ‘mechanical’ knee symptoms.”
New evidence ‘questions diagnostic utility’ of knee symptoms Sometimes called the “shock absorbers” of the knee, the menisci are a pair of horseshoe-shaped pieces of cartilage that help to cushion the knee joint. Among orthopaedic surgeons, conventional wisdom is that “mechanical” symptoms like knee locking or catching are caused by meniscal tears, which can be treated with an arthroscopic surgical procedure. However, a growing body of evidence suggests that other types of injuries can also cause these types of knee symptoms.
Other recent studies have suggested that “meniscal” symptoms like knee grinding, popping, or clicking are better indicators of meniscal tears. Dr. Matzkin and colleagues questioned whether either of these two types of symptoms are truly indicators of meniscus tear within the knee joint – and whether they are of value in surgical decision-making.
The researchers analyzed the relationship between these knee symptoms and the findings of knee arthroscopy in 565 patients. All patients underwent knee arthroscopy performed by Dr. Matzkin between 2012 and 2019. The goal was to determine whether “mechanical” or “meniscal” symptoms were related to the presence of meniscal tears, cartilage damage, or other types of joint disease identified via arthroscopy.
The most frequently reported symptoms included worse pain with knee pivoting/twisting (85 percent), knee grinding (74 percent), and knee catching (63 percent). Arthroscopy revealed unstable meniscal tears in 12 percent of patients, stable tears in 66 percent, and no tear in 21 percent.
Meniscal tear patterns and meniscal damage were found to be unrelated to individual symptoms of knee grinding or pain with pivoting.
In contrast, the overall severity of cartilage damage was significantly associated with knee symptoms – especially catching and grinding. Knee catching was present in 49 percent of patients with no cartilage damage versus 78 percent of those with damage in all three compartments of the knee.
Because meniscal tears and cartilage damage often occur together, the study suggests that structural cartilage damage is the “primary driver” of knee symptoms. “Our data align with the observation that cartilage damage and meniscal tears are both manifestations of overall degenerative knee disease,” Dr. Matzkin and coauthors write.
The findings “further question the diagnostic utility” of mechanical and meniscal symptoms and their use “as the indications for knee arthroscopy,” the researchers add. Dr. Matzkin and colleagues believe that future studies should avoid these misleading terms, and instead use specific descriptors of knee symptoms. The researchers plan further studies to assess how specific types of symptoms are related to outcomes after arthroscopic surgery.
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