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Evaluation and Treatment of Knee Pain: A Review

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posted on 2024-12-17, 07:41 authored by Vicky Duong, Win Min Oo, Changhai Ding, Adam CulvenorAdam Culvenor, David J Hunter

Importance: Approximately 5% of all primary care visits in adults are related to knee pain. Osteoarthritis (OA), patellofemoral pain, and meniscal tears are among the most common causes of knee pain.

Observations: Knee OA, affecting an estimated 654 million people worldwide, is the most likely diagnosis of knee pain in patients aged 45 years or older who present with activity-related knee joint pain with no or less than 30 minutes of morning stiffness (95% sensitivity; 69% specificity). Patellofemoral pain typically affects people younger than 40 years who are physically active and has a lifetime prevalence of approximately 25%. The presence of anterior knee pain during a squat is approximately 91% sensitive and 50% specific for patellofemoral pain. Meniscal tears affect an estimated 12% of the adult population and can occur following acute trauma (eg, twisting injury) in people younger than 40 years. Alternatively, a meniscal tear may be a degenerative condition present in patients with knee OA who are aged 40 years or older. The McMurray test, consisting of concurrent knee rotation (internal or external to test lateral or medial meniscus, respectively) and extension (61% sensitivity; 84% specificity), and joint line tenderness (83% sensitivity; 83% specificity) assist diagnosis of meniscal tears. Radiographic imaging of all patients with possible knee OA is not recommended. First-line management of OA comprises exercise therapy, weight loss (if overweight), education, and self-management programs to empower patients to better manage their condition. Surgical referral for knee joint replacement can be considered for patients with end-stage OA (ie, no or minimal joint space with inability to cope with pain) after using all appropriate conservative options. For patellofemoral pain, hip and knee strengthening exercises in combination with foot orthoses or patellar taping are recommended, with no indication for surgery. Conservative management (exercise therapy for 4-6 weeks) is also appropriate for most meniscal tears. For severe traumatic (eg, bucket-handle) tears, consisting of displaced meniscal tissue, surgery is likely required. For degenerative meniscal tears, exercise therapy is first-line treatment; surgery is not indicated even in the presence of mechanical symptoms (eg, locking, catching).

Conclusions and Relevance: Knee OA, patellofemoral pain, and meniscal tears are common causes of knee pain, can be diagnosed clinically, and can be associated with significant disability. First-line treatment for each condition consists of conservative management, with a focus on exercise, education, and self-management.

Funding

Dr Ding received grants from the National Natural Science Foundation of China (awards 82373653 and 81974342). Dr Culvenor is a recipient of a National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) of Australia Investigator Grant (award GNT2008523). Dr Hunter is employed by the University of Sydney and Royal North Shore Hospital; his salary support for the University of Sydney is supported by Arthritis Australia and an NHMRC Investigator Grant Leadership 2 (award 1194737).

History

Publication Date

2023-10-24

Journal

JAMA: Journal of the American Medical Association

Volume

330

Issue

16

Pagination

13p. (p. 1568-1580)

Publisher

American Medical Association

ISSN

0098-7484

Rights Statement

© 2023 The Authors. This manuscript version is made available under the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0

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