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Understanding Osgood-Schlatter Disease: Anatomy

Your knee is a complex joint with many parts. These parts work together to give you the flexibility and motion needed for walking, running, and jumping. But with Osgood-Schlatter disease, knee pain can leave you on the sidelines.

Side view of bent knee showing quad muscles.

A knee with Osgood-Schlatter disease

When your leg moves, the thigh muscle pulls the kneecap. Next, the kneecap pulls a tough band of connective tissue. This tissue then pulls on a bony lump at the top of your shinbone. In some kids, all that pulling can cause Osgood-Schlatter disease. This causes pain and often swelling on the front of the knee. The symptoms may limit your activities. This is because the pulling happens in an area of the bone that’s still growing. As a rule, growing parts of a bone are weaker than other parts. This makes the growing area more likely to get injured.

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