Patients who were managed by the KAC only, were followed up for a minimum of 6 weeks and were asymptomatic at discharge. Patients referred to a specialist were followed up prospectively in order to identify the accuracy of the initial diagnosis made in the KAC.
Patients were seen in the KAC after an average 10.5 days from injury. Initial diagnoses included 35 patelo-femoral pathologies, 30 non-specific soft tissue injuries, 28 collateral ligament injuries, 27 cruciate ligament injuries, 21 combined meniscal and ligamentous injuries, 19 meniscal injuries, 17 patients with knee arthritis, 2 combined cruciate and collateral ligament injuries, 5 patellar dislocations, and 7 non-specific knee effusions. Overall, only 52 patients (27.2%) were referred to a rheumatologist (n=6) or an orthopaedic surgeon (n=46). A total of 25 patients were referred for further investigation (Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) n=14, Arthroscopy n=10, or both n=2). Patients who missed >
2 appointments and had no further episodes were excluded from further analysis (n=20). The initial diagnosis correlated positively with that of the specialist in 26 out of 32 patients (81.3%) who completed a full treatment episode. The diagnosis by the physiotherapist and the specialist correlated with MRI or arthroscopy findings in 85.0% and 95.0% of cases respectively.