Prague Med. Rep. 2021, 122, 308-312

https://doi.org/10.14712/23362936.2021.29

Patella Fracture Identified Using Point-of-care Ultrasound

Mark Richman1,2, Andrew Kieffer1, Rachel Moss1, Daniel Dexeus1,2

1Department of Emergency Medicine, Northwell Health Long Island Jewish Medical Center, USA
2Donald and Barbara Zucker School of Medicine at Hofstra/Northwell, USA

Received March 9, 2020
Accepted October 20, 2021

A 49-year-old female fell from standing. Her right knee extended into the air. She had acute right knee pain preventing weight-bearing. Her knee was most comfortable fully-extended. She could not flex it due to pain, nor extend it against resistance. Tenderness and a horizontal defect were noted over the anterior knee. Bedside ultrasound demonstrated a horizontally-fractured patella (confirmed on X-ray) with intact femoral and patellar tendons. She was put in a knee immobilizer and underwent surgery, with return to full function and activities. Ultrasound can identify patella fractures and help with early evaluation, management, and specialty referral, as well as ordering more-focused imaging. In one study, POCUS (point-of-care ultrasound) for patella fracture had 95% sensitivity, 63% specificity, 86% positive predictive value, and 83% negative predictive value. The dynamic nature of ultrasound allows a ruptured patella (87% sensitivity) or quadriceps tendon (100% sensitivity) to be excluded with high certainty.

References

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