Affiliation:
1. The Hughston Clinic, PC, Columbus, Georgia
Abstract
We dissected 30 cadaveric knees to provide a detailed anatomic description of the biceps femoris muscle complex at the knee. The main components of the long head of the muscle are a reflected arm, a direct arm, an anterior arm, and a lateral and an anterior aponeurosis. The main components of the short head of the biceps femoris muscle are a proximal attachment to the long head's tendon, a capsular arm, a confluens of the biceps and the capsuloosseous layer of the iliotibial tract, a direct arm, an anterior arm, and a lateral apo neurosis. We examined 82 consecutive, acutely in jured knees with clinical signs of anterolateral-antero medial rotatory instability for the incidence and anatomic location of injuries to the biceps femoris mus cle. Injuries to components of that muscle were iden tified in 59 (72%) of these knees; 29 knees (35.4%) had multiple components injured. There were 3 injuries to the long head of the biceps femoris muscle (all in the reflected arm) and 89 to the short head. A statistically significant correlation (P = 0.01) was found between increased anterior translation with the knee at 25° of flexion as demonstrated by the Lachman test and in jury to the biceps-capsuloosseous iliotibial tract conflu ens. Additionally, adduction laxity at 30° of flexion cor related with a Segond fracture ( P = 0.04). These data establish, in part, the relationship of the biceps femoris complex injury to anterior translation instability.
Subject
Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine
Cited by
256 articles.
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