Osgood-Schlatter Disease in Emergency Medicine Clinical Presentation
- Author: Andrew K Chang, MD; Chief Editor: Rick Kulkarni, MD more...
History
- Osgood-Schlatter disease is a clinical diagnosis.
- Pain is the most common presenting complaint.
- The pain may be reproduced by extending the knee against resistance, stressing the quadriceps, or squatting with the knee in full flexion.
- Running, jumping, kneeling, squatting, and ascending/descending stairs exacerbate the pain.
- Relief of symptoms occurs with rest or restriction of activities.
- Pain usually has been present intermittently for several months before the patient seeks medical care.
- The pain is bilateral in 25% of cases.
- Approximately 50% of patients give a history of precipitating trauma.
Physical
- A visible soft tissue edema is present over the proximal tibial tuberosity.
- Tenderness to palpation over the proximal tibial tuberosity at the site of patellar insertion may be present.
- A firm mass may be palpable.
- Pain is reproduced by extension against forced resistance.
- Knee joint examination is normal; Osgood-Schlatter disease is an extra-articular disease.
- Absence of effusion or condylar tenderness is typical.
- Erythema of the tibial tuberosity may be present.
- Some patients may have quadriceps atrophy.
Causes
- The etiology is controversial, but the condition clearly is exacerbated by exercise. In one study of 389 adolescents athletes, 21% reported Osgood-Schlatter disease in those actively participating in sports as compared with only 4.5% of nonparticipants.[2]
- Approximately 50% of patients relate a history of precipitating trauma.
- Chronic microtrauma to the tibial tuberosity secondary to overuse of the quadriceps muscle is a leading theory of etiology.
- Histologic studies support a traumatic etiology.
- Risk factors
- Age between 8 and 15 years
- Male sex
- Rapid skeletal growth
- Repetitive jumping sports
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