X RAY BOTH KNEE LATERAL FLEXION VIEW

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X RAY BOTH KNEE LATERAL FLEXION VIEW
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X RAY BOTH KNEE LATERAL FLEXION VIEW, in Visit Clinic

Side-view X-ray of both knees with knees bent to check bones, joint space, alignment, and arthritis in Visit Clinic.

centreCentre Visit
SAMPLE TYPE
Tissue
FASTING REQUIRED
No
GENDER
Male/Female
GET REPORTS IN
25 hours
TEST INCLUDED
1
Customers
20K+Customers
Labs
CertifiedLabs
Rating
4.5+Rating
Accuracy
ProvenAccuracy

What is a X RAY BOTH KNEE LATERAL FLEXION VIEW Test in Visit Clinic?

The X-ray both knee lateral flexion view is an imaging test that takes side-on pictures of each knee while it is bent. It does not measure a substance but shows bone shape, joint space, alignment, and calcified fragments. This view is important because it highlights the patellofemoral joint and areas hidden on straight views. It helps detect fractures, arthritis, dislocations, loose bodies, and some cartilage defects. Doctors use it along with other knee X-rays to pinpoint injuries, plan treatment, monitor healing after surgery or trauma, and check for worsening joint space narrowing. It is quick, widely available, and involves low radiation exposure. Results are often ready the same day.

X RAY BOTH KNEE LATERAL FLEXION VIEW Test Preparation in Visit Clinic

No special preparation is required.

X RAY BOTH KNEE LATERAL FLEXION VIEW Test Parameters in Visit Clinic

The X RAY BOTH KNEE LATERAL FLEXION VIEW test evaluates various parameters. Here are the main parameters checked:

  • Single test

Why Take a X RAY BOTH KNEE LATERAL FLEXION VIEW Test in Visit Clinic?

X RAY BOTH KNEE LATERAL FLEXION VIEW is ordered as part of knee imaging when patients have trauma, pain, swelling, limited motion, or locking. It helps diagnose fractures, arthritis, patellar tracking problems, and loose fragments. Abnormal findings commonly come from injury, wear-and-tear degeneration, inflammation, repetitive strain, obesity, or prior surgery. A strong family history of early arthritis or bone disorders may make this view especially useful.

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Frequently asked questions

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What is the position of the knee lateral X-ray in Visit Clinic?plus

A lateral knee radiograph is taken with the patient lying or seated on the affected side, knee flexed about 20–30° so femoral condyles are superimposed and the patella is in profile. The X‑ray beam is directed horizontally, perpendicular to the joint space, and centered at the joint to include distal femur, proximal tibia and patella. Immobilize and position to avoid rotation.

Are knee X-rays 2 or 3 views in Visit Clinic?plus

Knee X‑rays are typically taken in three views: anteroposterior (AP), lateral and a skyline/sunrise view of the patella. Three views better assess joint space, fractures, alignment and the patella. In some situations—minor injury or basic screening—two views (AP and lateral) may be used, but three views are generally recommended for a full evaluation.

What is a Rosenberg view in an X-ray in Visit Clinic?plus

A Rosenberg view is a weight-bearing, posterior–anterior knee X‑ray taken with the patient standing and the knee flexed about 45°. This PA flexion view accentuates joint-space narrowing and osteoarthritic changes between femoral condyles and the tibial plateau, often revealing cartilage loss and joint degeneration not seen on routine AP or nonweight-bearing films. It’s commonly used to evaluate knee osteoarthritis.

What is a lateral view of the knee joint space in Visit Clinic?plus

A lateral view of the knee joint space is a side-on radiographic projection that images the patellofemoral and tibiofemoral compartments. It shows soft-tissue swelling or effusion, alignment of femoral and tibial condyles, joint-space height, cartilage loss, and occult fractures. Clinically it helps assess osteoarthritis, trauma, dislocation, and joint effusion, complementing AP and skyline views for comprehensive knee evaluation.

How to take lateral view X-ray in Visit Clinic?plus

Position the patient so the body part is rotated 90° from the frontal plane and lies parallel to the image receptor. Place the side of interest adjacent to the detector (left lateral for chest when possible). Center the central ray perpendicular to the receptor over the area of interest, collimate tightly, use appropriate exposure settings, immobilize, instruct breath‑hold for chest/spine, apply shielding, and mark the side before exposure.

What is the skyline projection of the knee in Visit Clinic?plus

The skyline (sunrise) projection is an axial, tangential knee X‑ray taken with the knee flexed so the beam skims the patella. It visualizes the patellofemoral joint and patellar articular surface, helping detect fractures, subluxation or dislocation, chondral defects and joint space narrowing. Different beam angles and flexion degrees (eg 30–45°) optimize visualization of the trochlear groove.