The purposes of this study were to report clinical features of the developmental anomaly of ossification type bipartite or tripartite patella using a large series and to propose a new classification for the developmental anomaly of ossification type bipartite or tripartite patella. The first author prospectively examined 111 patients with symptomatic or asymptomatic bipartite (131 knees) or tripartite (8 knees) patellae. Eighty-six (77%) were male and 25 (23%) were female. Forty-three patients (39%) showed right knee involvement and 40 (36%) showed left, while 28 (25%) showed involvement in both knees. Forty-six bipartite and 4 tripartite patellae (36%) were symptomatic and 85 bipartite and 4 tripartite patellae (64%) were asymptomatic at initial examination. The median age at onset of pain of symptomatic patients (50 knees) was 15.6 ± 8.1 years (range, 10-51 years). The most common symptom was pain at the separated fragments during or after strenuous activity in all 50 knees. Physical examination revealed localized tenderness over the separated fragments in all 50 knees. Bipartite or tripartite patellae were classified by evaluating location and number of fragments. One hundred fifteen knees (83%) were classified as supero-lateral bipartite type, 16 (12%) were lateral bipartite type, 6 (4%) were supero-lateral and lateral tripartite type, and 2 (1%) were supero-lateral tripartite type. For the developmental anomaly of ossification type bipartite or tripartite patella, a classification based on both location and number of fragments is simple and easy to understand and applicable to all types of bipartite or tripartite patella.
The trochlea of the femur is a very unusual site for chondral fracture. Little is known of the mechanism of injuries confined to the articular cartilage of the trochlea of the femur. A very unusual case of chondral fracture of the lateral trochlea of the femur occurring in an adolescent is reported here. The mechanism by which this injury occurred could be evaluated in this patient. The cartilage on the convex surface of the lateral trochlea was likely avulsed proximally by shear force of the patella during rapid extension of the weight-bearing knee from a flexed position. From a viewpoint of mechanism, this injury differs from the more usual osteochondral or chondral fractures of the weight bearing area of the femoral condyle, which are usually accompanied by twisting forces.
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