www.coringroup.com

 


























 

 

 

The Knee    
     
Although the knee may look like a simple joint, it is actually one of the more complex joints in the body, and is the joint most likely to be injured at some point in your life. The knee joint is made up of bones (which support the knee and provide the rigid structure), muscles (which actually move the joint), ligaments (which hold the joint together and stabilise it), and cartilage (which protects the joint and allows the bones to slide freely on each other). The knee joint is formed by four bones. The femur, which is the large bone in your thigh, attaches by ligaments and a capsule to your tibia, or shinbone. Just below and next to the tibia is the fibula, which runs parallel to the tibia. The patella, or knee cap, rides on the front of the knee joint as the knee   Diagram of the Knee
bends. When the knee moves, it does not just bend (flex) and straighten (extend), but also rotates about the inner (medial) side of the joint - making for a very complex motion as it bends. Problems can occur when any of these parts of the knee joint are damaged by injury or disease.
     
Knee Surgery    
     
Knee surgery is not new - there is evidence which suggests that the ancient Egyptians operated on the knee joint, but probably for traumatic injury, rather than for joint diseases. Joint surgery on the knee really began in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries and prosthetic knee joint replacements appeared just after the end of the Second World War. Total knee replacement is a surgical procedure in which parts of the knee which have been injured or damaged by disease (such as osteoarthritis) are replaced with artificial parts.