Biomechanics of the knee joint

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Biomechanics of the knee joint deals with the principle, ranges and mechanism of movement of this joint.

Articulatio genus (knee joint)[edit | edit source]

It is the most complex joint in the human body.

Articulatio genus

Compound joint[edit | edit source]

  • articulation of two bones and two menisci;
Knee joint

The femur and tibia are in contact with their two condyles. 2 menisci are inserted on the condyles of the tibia (meniscus medialis et lateralis).

Strengthening knee ligaments[edit | edit source]

  1. lateral ligaments (ligamenta collateralia mediale et laterale);
  2. frontal ligaments (retinacula patellae, ligamentum patellae);
  3. back ligaments (ligamentum popliteum obliquum, ligamentum popliteum arcuatum);
  4. intra-articular ligaments (ligamenta cruciata anterior et posterior, ligamentum transversum genus, ligamentum meniscofemorale);
  5. vases small;
  • strengthening ligaments are of great importance for knee stability.

Moves[edit | edit source]

Section of knee in sagittal plane
MRI knee

Flexion and extension[edit | edit source]

  • Knee flexion also includes a rotational movement.
  • Flexion has 4 phases:
    1. initial rotation (knee unlock = flexion 5°);
    2. rolling movement (flexion 10°–20°);
    3. sliding movement (from flexion 20° to about 140°);
    4. final rotation (knee lock).

Rotation[edit | edit source]

  1. inner (shorter move);
  2. external (longer movement);
  • rotation is part of flexion;
  • unlocks and locks the knee joint.

Flexion and extension are analogous movements in reverse order[edit | edit source]

  • extension is considered a basic position;
  • extended joint is firm and allows standing and walking;
  • flexion up to 160° can be performed from the basic position;
  • we also distinguish the middle position = the joint is in slight flexion, about 20°–30°.

Overall movement of the knee joint[edit | edit source]

Initial rotation[edit | edit source]

  • the internal condyle of the femur rotates externally;
  • rotation is moderate - internal up to 17°, external up to 21°;
  • initial rotation loosens the cruciate ligaments = unlocking the joint.

Rolling motion[edit | edit source]

  • the condyles of the femur roll on the articular surfaces of the tibia and on the menisci;

Sliding Motion[edit | edit source]

  • includes sliding movement and final rotation together = knee locking;
  • the condyles of the femur together with the menisci slide backwards on the tibia.

Injury[edit | edit source]

  • Injuries occur most often in the following sports:
    • football, skiing, handball, volleyball, tennis.
  • The menisci are the most susceptible to injury - mainly the medial meniscus, anterior cruciate ligament, lateral ligaments.

Links[edit | edit source]

Related Articles[edit | edit source]

External links[edit | edit source]

References[edit | edit source]

  • ŠIHÁK, Radomír – GRIM, Miloš. Anatomy. 2nd, edit. and add edition. Prague : Grada Publishing, 2001. 497 pp. ISBN 80-7169-970-5.


  • MARIÁNKOVÁ, Hana. Anatomy and traumatology of the knee joint. Brno, 2007, 


  • JANGLE, Mark. An attempt to compare the forces acting on the knee joint in the squat and in the moderate squat in soccer players and table tennis players. Brno, 2005,