Affiliation:
1. Department of Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation, Vanderbilt Sports Medicine Center, Nashville, Tennessee
2. Department of Radiology, Vanderbilt Sports Medicine Center, Nashville, Tennessee
Abstract
Background Intra-articular knee injections are routinely performed in clinical practice without documenting intra-articular placement. Hypothesis A small amount of air to an intra-articular knee injection produces an audible “squishing” sound with range of motion. Study Design Prospective nonrandomized clinical trial. Methods The study group (20 knees from 20 patients) received an intra-articular injection with a mixture of local anesthetic, corticosteroid, contrast dye, and 1 to 2 cc of air. The control group (10 knees from 5 patients) received extra-articular injections of a mixture of local anesthetic, contrast dye, and 2 cc of air. All knees were examined immediately after injection for a squishing sound with range of motion. Postinjection arthrographic radiographs were taken to verify the actual placement. Result All study group knees and no control group knees had intra-articular contrast by radiograph. Clearly audible squishing sounds were heard in 17 of 20 study knees (sensitivity of 85%). Squishing sounds were audible in none of the control knees (specificity of 100%). Conclusion Adding 1 to 2 cc of air to knee injections provides a no-cost, reliable, sensitive, and specific method of confirming accurate placement. Clinical Relevance This simple method is easily reproduced, can confirm accurate placement, and can eliminate extra-articular injection as the reason for clinical response failure.
Subject
Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine
Cited by
38 articles.
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