Background: Due to the low potential for primary biological healing of the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL), the most popular approach is currently reconstruction using a graft. Recent research indicates that the technique of strengthening a damaged ligament with synthetic tapes (internal bracing) may be an alternative to reconstructive treatment, especially in cases of partial ACL damage.
Objectives: To compare and evaluate the possibility of using a synthetic graft (Neoligaments or FiberTape) to treat partial lesions of the ACL.
Material And Methods: This was a retrospective cohort study. Selected from a pool of 128 patients undergoing primary unilateral intra-articular ACL reconstruction due to partial lesion of the ACL, group I (Neoligaments) and group II (FiberTape) each included 30 patients. Range of motion (ROM), the Lachman test, the anterior drawer test and the pivot-shift test, the Lysholm Knee Scoring Scale, and International Knee Documentation Committee (IKDC) 2000 scale were used for assessment. Follow-up was carried out after 2 years.
Results: The knee joint regained anterior stability in both the subjective and objective assessments in all patients in both groups. The subjective results were respectively: in group I, 97.2 ±3.2 points on the Lysholm scale and 93.9 ±6.1 points on the IKDC 2000 scale; in group II, 96.1 ±4.9 points on the Lysholm scale and 93.2 ±6.8 points on the IKDC 2000 scale. Group comparison of the results of the IKDC 2000 scale, Lysholm Scale and ROM obtained postoperatively showed no statistically significant differences between groups.
Conclusions: Reconstruction of partial ACL lesions using a synthetic graft allows regained stability of the knee joint. The results of subjective assessment are comparable with the functional assessment results. The comparison between Neoligaments and FiberTape shows the same functional and objective results, although FiberTape is preferable from an economical perspective.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.17219/acem/132036 | DOI Listing |
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