The suggestion of a meniscal tear produces a pavlovian response in the orthopaedic surgeon. However, meniscal signal anomalies and associated changes become common with age in symptom free knees. T he issue for the IME requested to assess workers with painful knees is to determine if the MRI changes represent a painful injury and if the treatment planned (usually arthroscopy) may, in fact, be harmful. MRI signal changes are assessed on the likelihood they predict for unstable meniscal tears. Some patterns of meniscal tears are benign. Associated changes such as baker's cyst and ligament thickening are also common but are poor predictors of symptomatic tears. Preclinical osteoarthritis has a high incidence of associated meniscal change and arthroscopic menisectomy may accelerate osteoarthritis progression. Clinical tests have variable specificity and sensitivity but in combination with an understanding of the patterns of MRI signal can be combined to predict which meniscal tears would benefit from arthroscopic surgery, which injuries would do as well with non-operative treatment and which patterns predict deterioration after surgery. As the views of the IME are often contrary to the surgeon, a comprehensive bibliography is provided for any who need to argue their case. As the topic is information and image dense, a CD ROM will be distributed.