Third Street Veterinary Hospital, PC
McMinnville, Oregon 97128
Office phone: (503) 472-9418
Luxating Patella
(Dislocated Kneecap)
The patella, or kneecap, should be located in
the center of the knee joint. The term
"luxating" means out of place or dislocated. Therefore, a luxating patella is a kneecap
that moves out of its normal location.
Contributing Factors
The muscles of the thigh attach, directly or
indirectly, to the top of the kneecap.
There is a ligament, the patellar ligament, running from the bottom of
the kneecap to a point on the tibia just below the knee joint. When the thigh muscles contract, the force
is transmitted through the patella and through the patellar ligament to the
point on the top of the tibia. This results in extension (straightening) of the
knee. The patella stays in the center
of the leg because the point of attachment of the patellar ligament is on the
midline and because the patella slides in a groove on the lower end of the
femur (the long bone which fits between the knee and the hip).
Prevalence
Patellar luxation is
most common in small toy breeds of dogs.
Causes/Transmission
The patella luxates when the point of attachment
of the patellar ligament is not on the midline of the tibia. It is almost always located too far medial
(toward the midline of the body). As the
thigh muscles contract, the force is pulled medial. After several months or years of this abnormal movement, the
inner side of the groove in the femur wears down. Once the side of the groove wears down, the patella is then free
to dislocate. When this occurs, the dog
has difficulty bearing weight on the leg.
It may learn to kick the leg and snap the patella back into its normal
location. However, because the side of
the groove is gone, it dislocates again easily.
Clinical Signs
Some dogs can tolerate this problem for many
years, some for all of their lives.
However, this weakness in the knee predisposes the knee to other
injuries, especially torn cruciate ligaments.
Also, arthritic changes may take place in the joint and make it painful.
Diagnosis
Luxating patellae can
be detected with a routine orthopedic examination of the knee joint.
Therapy
A luxating patella can be repaired surgically by
relocating the point of attachment of the patellar ligament and by deepening
the groove in the femur. This should be
done if your dog has a persistent lameness or if other knee injuries occur
secondary to the luxating patella.
Prognosis
Surgical repair is generally very
successful. The prognosis is more
favorable when the luxation is not severe or if repair occurs before arthritis
develops.