ILIO TIBIAL BAND SYNDROME
Transcription
ILIO TIBIAL BAND SYNDROME
ILIO TIBIAL BAND SYNDROME DR GAVIN SHANG SPORTS PHYSICIAN MBBCH (WITS) MPHIL SPORTS MED (UCT/SSISA) INTRODUCTION • ITB syndrome: overuse injury of distal ITB tendon • Friction (anterior to posterior) vs. compression (medial to lateral) over and against lateral femoral condyle respectively • Most common cause of lateral knee pain • ITB friction / compression: fat pad vs. bursal irritation / inQlammation ANATOMY • Flat and widened portion of distal fascia • Proximally formed by TFL and Gluteus Maximus • Extends from iliac crest to Gerdy’s tubercle (lat tibial condyle) • ITB anterior to lateral femoral condyle knee extension • ITB posterior to lateral femoral condyle knee Qlexed >30° • ITB: stabilizing ligament between lateral femoral condyle and lateral tibia ETIOLOGY • Traditional view: ITB not attached to bone between proximal and distal insertions (movement anterior to posterior) • View challenged: Fairclough et al 2006 -‐ ITB attached to distal femur by oblique Qibrous bands (movement more medial to lateral) -‐ ITB compresses highly innervated fat pad/ bursa against epicondyle during knee Qlexion (associated tibial internal rotation during Qlexion-‐extension) -‐ Better understanding of functional anatomy and biomechanics -‐ Improves management strategies RUNNING -‐ 10-‐15% of running related injuries -‐ affects 5-‐10% of runners -‐ greatest at 30° of knee Qlexion -‐ downhills (knee less Qlexed at foot-‐strike) -‐ insidious onset with resolution -‐ worsens and painful enough to force cessation of activity -‐ overuse (frequency and intensity) -‐ varus knee alignment -‐ lateral pelvic tilt -‐ inappropriate footwear -‐ steeply cambered surface -‐ limb length discrepencies CYCLING -‐ ITB pulled anteriorly on down stroke -‐ ITB pulled posteriorly on up stroke -‐ saddle height -‐ varus allignment -‐ cleat inversion -‐ tibial internal rotation DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSES • Patello-‐femoral anterior knee pain • Lateral collateral ligament injury • Postero-‐lateral corner / popliteal tendon injury • Common peroneal nerve entrapment • Lateral meniscal tear • Degenerative lateral compartment OA • Stress fracture • Referred pain DIAGNOSIS • Mainly clinical: -‐ Noble’s test (30°) -‐ Ober test (ITB Qlexion) • Imaging: -‐ only for exclusion of differentials (X-‐rays, MSK ultrasound, MRI) • Make the diagnosis • Treat the condition • Address the cause TREATMENT • NSAIDs and analgesics • Corticosteroid inQiltration(s) • Orthotics (limit tibial internal rotation) • Stop aggravating activity • Cross train • Check bike set up • Avoid cambered surfaces and downhills TREATMENT • Physiotherapy • Stretches and pelvic stabilizing rehabilitation (gluteal strengthening) • Continued maintenance • Surgery