Occult osseous lesions occurring with anterior cruciate ligament tears have been described only recently. Twenty patients with complete anterior cruciate ligament disruptions and evidence of occult osseous lesions on their preoperative magnetic resonance (MR) images were evaluated retrospectively at 24- to 73-months' followup to document the natural history and long-term effects of the lesions. Thirty-seven initial osseous signal abnormalities were documented on the MR images of 20 patients. All 20 patients had lesions in the posterolateral tibial plateau, and 13 had additional lesions in the lateral femoral condyle. Twenty-four of the 37 osseous lesions appeared resolved on followup MR images, and 13 had become sclerotic. Lesions of the lateral tibial plateau were especially likely to be sclerotic at followup. This study reaffirms the specificity of bone signal abnormalities of the posterolateral tibial plateau and lateral femoral condyle in association with complete anterior cruciate ligament tears. The data indicate that a proportion of anterior cruciate ligament patients will incur progressive articular cartilage abnormalities, although case-by-case predictions based on initial MR images would be unreliable.

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