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Does Bone Plug and Graft Orientation (Inferior Versus Posterior) Alter Native Femoral Footprint Coverage in Bone Patellar Tendon Bone Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction? | LitMetric

Purpose: The purpose of this study was to compare the percentage of native femoral anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) footprint covered by the 2 most clinically relevant bone plug/graft orientations used with interference screw fixation in ACL reconstruction. A secondary purpose was to assess whether a transtibial or tibia-independent drilling technique would affect this outcome.

Methods: Five matched pairs of cadaver knees were used. Each matched pair had 1 knee assigned to a 10-mm femoral socket prepared via a transtibial (TT) drilling technique and the other via an anteromedial (AM) drilling technique. The bone plug of each graft was press-fitted into the femoral socket with the graft collagen in 2 distinct clinically relevant orientations (collagen inferior or posterior). The digitized graft collagen cross-sectional area (CSA) in each orientation was overlaid onto the native femoral ACL footprint CSA to generate a percentage of native ACL footprint covered by graft collagen.

Results: The average native ACL femoral footprint CSA was 110.5 ± 9.1 mm, with no difference between knees assigned to TT or AM drilling (112.6 ± 2.7 vs 108.4 ± 13.0 mm, P = .49). The average femoral socket CSA was 95.4 ± 8.7 mm, with no difference between TT and AM tunnels (95.5 ± 9.9 vs 95.3 ± 8.4 mm, P = .96). There was no difference between the percentage of native footprint covered between TT and AM sockets (76.8% ± 7.8% vs 82.2% ± 13.7%, P = .47). Irrespective of drilling technique, there was significantly greater native ACL footprint covered by graft collagen when the bone plug was oriented with graft collagen inferior rather than posterior (75.6% ± 6.3% vs 65.4% ± 11.4%, P = .02).

Conclusion: Orienting the femoral bone plug such that the graft collagen is inferior rather than posterior significantly increases native ACL femoral footprint coverage in bone-patellar tendon-bone ACL reconstruction. This effect is consistent across AM and TT drilling techniques.

Clinical Relevance: Surgeons attempting to restore an anatomic ACL footprint should consider bone plug-graft orientation when performing ACL reconstruction.

Study Design: Controlled laboratory study.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.arthro.2020.01.050DOI Listing

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