Appendix A – Arthroscopy of the Knee

Introduction

Arthroscopy of the knee is an operation in which a small camera, and possibly surgical instruments, are inserted into the knee through two or three small puncture wounds.  Understanding what the basic procedure entails is straightforward if we look at the etymology of the word.


Arthroscopic procedures have equivalents in other branches of surgery.  Examples include laparoscopy (laparo-: of the abdominal wall) in general surgery and cystoscopy (cysto-: relating to the urinary bladder) in urology.

Arthroscopic procedures

In the most basic of arthroscopic procedures, the structures within the knee are viewed and assessed using a camera called an arthroscope, with a view to diagnosis.   The structures examined include the meniscus, the synovium, the articular cartilage and the cruciate ligaments.

Depending on findings, additional therapeutic procedures can be carried out via the insertion of surgical instruments.  Such procedures include:

 A first guide to interpreting arthroscopic images

Many patients seen on the ward and in clinics will have arthroscopy reports and associated images in their notes.  For medical students, junior doctors and the patients themselves, these images can sometimes be disorientating, as it is necessary to imagine you are inside the knee to work out what the different structures are.  Here, a few simple rules for orienting oneself to the images are presented.


The images below, of a left knee joint, are annotated with reference to the rules above, to clarify which part of the joint they show.


This is the inside of a left knee, viewed from the front.  Any structures on the left of the page are therefore on the medial side of the knee, and those on the right are lateral.



The tibial plateaus are kept horizontal at the bottom of the image.

The medial meniscus is shown ‘floating’ between the two articular surfaces.  Under normal load, the meniscus would be compressed between the two.


This is the inside of a left knee, viewed from the front.  Any structures on the left of the page are therefore on the medial side of the knee, and those on the right are lateral.

The tibia plateaus are kept horizontal at  the bottom of the image.

In this case, we can see a defect in the articular cartilage of the lateral tibial plateau, as indicated by the probe.


left medial



Again, this is the inside of a left knee, this time viewed looking upwards at the patella-femoral joint.  Lateral and medial are the same as the images above.

The key to understanding the orientation of this image is to recognise the wedge-shaped posterior surface of the patella and the trochea groove of the femoral condyles.

In this case, the articular surfaces to the bottom of the image are the femoral condyles.