Title of article :
Comparison of Thessaly Test with Joint Line Tenderness and McMurray Test in the Diagnosis of Meniscal Tears
Author/Authors :
Shekarchi, B Department of Radiology - AJA University of Medical Sciences - Tehran, Iran , Panahi, A Chronic Respiratory Diseases Research Center - National Research Institute of Tuberculosis and Lung Diseases (NRITLD) - Tehran, Iran , Raeissadat, SA Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation - Shaheed Beheshti University of Medical Sciences - Tehran, Iran , Maleki, N Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation - AJA University of Medical Sciences - Tehran, Iran , Nayebabbas, S Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation - AJA University of Medical Sciences - Tehran, Iran , Farhadi, P Department of Radiology - Shiraz University of Medical Sciences - Shiraz, Iran
Abstract :
Introduction: Meniscus injuries are the most frequent problem of the knee. The aim of this study was to investigate the accuracy of the Thessaly test and comparing it with those
of McMurray and Joint-line tenderness tests for diagnosing meniscal tears.
Materials and methods: This study was designed as a prospective observational one done in an outpatient clinic at a university hospital. 106 patients with knee pain and 82 agematched control were included during study period (from February 2014 to January 2015). Each patient was clinically
examined with McMurray, Thessaly, and joint line
tenderness tests. Then, the findings were matched by MRI
and arthroscopic findings. The sensitivity, specificity,
positive predictive value, negative predictive value and
accuracy were calculated as main outcomes.
Results: Based on MRI, Thessaly was the most sensitive for
medial meniscus tears (56.2%), while McMurray and jointline tenderness were more specific (89.1% and 88.0%,
respectively). For lateral meniscus tears, McMurray was the
most sensitive (56.2%) and all were specific (McMurray
89.6%, Thessaly 88.4%, joint-line tenderness 90.2%). With
arthroscopy, Thessaly was the most sensitive for medial
meniscus (76.6%), while McMurray and joint-line
tenderness were more specific (81.0%, and 81.0%).
Agreement with arthroscopy was the highest with McMurray
(for medial meniscus kappa=0.40, p<0.001, and for lateral
meniscus kappa=0.38, p=0.002). Conclusion: The Thessaly can be used to screen for medial
meniscus tears. McMurray and joint-line tenderness should be used for suspected medial meniscus tears. For lateral meniscus, McMurray is appropriate for screening and all the tests are useful in clinic.
Keywords :
Thessaly , joint line tenderness , McMurray , meniscal tears
Journal title :
Malaysian Orthopaedic Journal