Degenerative joint disease (osteoarthritis)
fluid inside the knee joint
Fluid build up above the knee cap
Trauma......was there a fall or sports injury?.....If so possible meniscus tear......Trauma to a knee can cause both...
ANKYLOSIS
A condition of blood within a joint
Joint effusion
Swelling and stiffness in a joint without the expected pain, or with less pain than would be expected, are the primary symptoms of this condition. As the condition progresses, however, the joint can become very painful due to fluid build-up
Symptoms of joint effusion is usually caused by arthritis, gout, rheumatoid arthritis, septic arthritis, osteoarthritis, ankylosing spondylitis, and inflammatory arthritis.
Harry Potter
arthritis is a medical condition affecting a joint or joints, causing pain, swelling, and stiffness
There is no such condition as burtosis; perhaps you are referring to bursitis. Bursitis may refer to the swelling of the elbow joint, shoulder, hip or knee. The condition can be described as an inflammation of the bursa that is very painful.
Fluid build up above the knee cap
fluid inside the knee joint
Facet joints are where certain bones fit together such as in the vertebral column. An effusion is escape of fluid into a part or tissue, and bilateral of course means on both sides. Bilateral facet joint effusion indicates fluid being released on both sides of the vertebrae.
ICD-9-CM diagnosis code for: Effusion of joint; ankle and foot
To remove excess fluid on the joint.
Arthritis is a condition affecting joints, not muscles, so pain would be located in a joint, not in the calves. However, having a painful arthritic joint could lead to excessive or abnormal straining of the calves and thus, indirectly, to pain in the calves as well as the joint itself.