Knee (AP view)

Last revised by Fiona Pyke on 26 Nov 2023

The knee anteroposterior view is a standard projection to assess the knee joint, distal femur, proximal tibia and fibula and the patella.

This view demonstrates the distal femur and proximal tibia/fibula in their natural anatomical position allowing for assessment of suspected dislocations, fractures, localizing foreign bodies and osteoarthritis.

  • patient is supine on the table with the knee and ankle joint in contact with the table

  • leg is extended

  • ensure the knee is not rotated

  • anteroposterior projection

  • centering point

    • center of the knee 1.5 cm distal to the apex of the patella

  • collimation

    • superior to include the distal femur

    • inferior to include the proximal tibia/fibula

    • lateral to include the skin margin 

    • medial to include medial skin margin

  • orientation  

    • portrait

  • detector size

    • 24 cm x 30 cm

  • exposure

    • 60-70 kVp

    • 7-10 mAs

  • SID

    • 100 cm

  • grid

    • no

The femoral and tibial condyles should be symmetrical, with the head of the fibula slightly superimposed by the lateral tibial condyle. The patella is resting on the superior portion of the image superimposing the distal femur.

The fibula head is a great indication of rotation, if the fibula head is entirely superimposed, the image is not AP; to correct this you must internally rotate until the knee is in even contact with the image detector.

Very slim patients may require a slight caudal angle to better visualize the joint space in an AP fashion. The opposite applies for larger patients (thicker thighs mean the leg may be naturally flexed at rest) and would require a slight cephalic angle. Whether cephalic or caudal, an angle of approximately 5-8° is adequate.

ADVERTISEMENT: Supporters see fewer/no ads

Updating… Please wait.

 Unable to process the form. Check for errors and try again.

 Thank you for updating your details.