The knee is the largest joint in the body. A healthy knee moves
easily, allowing you to walk, turn, and do many other activities
without pain. A complex network of bones, cartilage, ligaments,
muscles, and tendons work together to make a knee flexible.
There are three bones in your knee joint. Your thighbone (femur)
sits on top of your shinbone (tibia). When you bend or straighten your
knee, the rounded end of your thighbone rolls and glides across the
relatively flat upper surface of your shinbone. The third bone is
often called the kneecap (patella), which is attached to the muscles,
allowing you to straighten your knee. Your kneecap provides leverage
and reduces strain on these muscles.
In a healthy knee joint, the surfaces of these bones are very
smooth and covered with a tough protective tissue called cartilage.
Ligaments (another type of soft tissue) lie along the sides and
back of the knee, holding the bones of the knee joint in place. These
ligaments work with the muscles, bones and tendons so that you can
bend and straighten your knee. Fluid-filled sacs (bursae) cushion the
area where skin or tendons glide across bone. The knee also has a
lining (synovium) that secretes a clear liquid called synovial fluid.
This fluid lubricates the joint, further reducing friction and making
movement easier.
As you might expect, there are many different reasons why you
could be feeling knee pain, including injury, infection, and arthritis.