UMEM Educational Pearls

Title: Identification of Knee Effusions With Ultrasound: A Comparison of Three Methods

Category: Ultrasound

Keywords: knee effusion, ultrasound, method (PubMed Search)

Posted: 1/21/2026 by Kerith Joseph, MD (Updated: 1/22/2026)
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Study Overview

Title: Identification of Knee Effusions With Ultrasound: A Comparison of Three Methods
Design: Prospective cohort study
Setting: Outpatient orthopaedic clinic
Participants: 52 adults (104 knees), including 57 painful knees

Objective

Determine whether two simple dynamic techniques improve ultrasound detection of suprapatellar knee effusions compared with static scanning.

Ultrasound Methods Compared

Static scanning: Patient relaxed; standard long- and short-axis views.

Parapatellar pressure (Method 1): Examiner compresses medial and lateral parapatellar recesses during scanning.

Quadriceps contraction (Method 2): Patient actively contracts quadriceps during scanning.

Outcome Measure

Presence of fluid in the suprapatellar recess (graded using a standardized ultrasound effusion scale).

Key Results

Effusions detected:

Static scanning: 45

Parapatellar pressure: 58

Quadriceps contraction: 77

Comparative performance:

Quadriceps contraction was superior to parapatellar pressure for detecting:

All effusions (PR 1.33; P < 0.001)

Painful knees (PR 1.24; P = 0.036)

Painless knees (PR 1.50; P = 0.006)

Both dynamic methods outperformed static scanning.

Additional detection beyond static scanning:

Parapatellar pressure: +16.9% of knees

Quadriceps contraction: +54.2% of knees

Reliability (Inter-rater Agreement)

Static scanning: ? = 0.771

Parapatellar pressure: ? = 0.686

Quadriceps contraction: ? = 0.846

All methods showed high reliability, with quadriceps contraction highest.

Conclusions

Both parapatellar pressure and patient-initiated quadriceps contraction significantly improve ultrasound detection of suprapatellar knee effusions.

Quadriceps contraction is the most effective method, especially for small or occult (grade 1) effusions.