A prospective study was done of the use of allogeneic tissue to reconstruct the anterior cruciate ligament in knees in which an intra-articular or an extra-articular operation had failed. Sixty-six consecutive patients (sixty-six knees) had such an operation with use of bone-patellar ligament-bone allografts; all but one returned for follow-up evaluation twenty-three to seventy-eight months (mean, forty-two months) after the operation. A total of 235 previous operations had been performed in these sixty-six knees, including eighty-one procedures for rupture of the anterior cruciate ligament. The results of the allograft procedure were evaluated with a subjective and objective system that rated twenty factors. The anterior-posterior displacement was substantially improved in most of the patients. According to data derived from arthrometric studies and pivot-shift tests of the fifty-seven patients who were so evaluated and in whom the condition was unilateral, 53 per cent (thirty) of the reconstructed ligaments were determined to be functional; 21 per cent (twelve ligaments), partially functional; and 26 per cent (fifteen ligaments), a failure. When we calculated the rate of failure by including ten failures that had occurred within two years after the operation with the fifteen that occurred in patients who had been followed for at least two years, the over-all rate of failure was 33 per cent (twenty-five of seventy-five operations). There was significant improvement in the subjective ratings of functional limitations and symptoms (p < 0.01) and in the over-all rating score (p < 0.0001). However, there was a significant difference between the scores of the patients in whom the surfaces of the articular cartilage had appeared normal at the index operation and those of the patients in whom there had been noteworthy fissuring and fragmentation or exposure of subchondral bone. After the program of rehabilitation, which included immediate motion of the knee, a range of motion of 0 to 135 degrees was restored in all but five knees, four of which lacked only 5 degrees of this extent of flexion or extension. The results demonstrate that bone-patellar ligament-bone allografts may be used when proper autogenous tissues are not available and that symptoms and abnormal displacement were reduced in most of our patients.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.2106/00004623-199407000-00010 | DOI Listing |
Background: Accurate femoral tunnel positioning is essential for successful anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction. Tunnel malposition can happen due to limited arthroscopic visibility as well as anatomic variance. The use of customized patient-specific guides can optimize surgical planning and enhance accuracy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: To compare postoperative activity levels between patients who received an anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (ACLR) with- and without a lateral extra-articular procedure (LEAP).
Objectives: The primary objective is to examine whether patients treated with an ALCR and LEAP have a greater chance to return to sport (RTS) and return to their pre-injury level of sport (RTPS). The re-rupture rates between the two groups will also be analysed as this is of great influence on the RTS and RTPS.
J Knee Surg
March 2025
Department of Radiology, King Saud University, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
Background: Anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction is commonly performed in orthopedic surgery. Hamstring autografts are frequently used as a graft option for the ACL; however, a clear consensus on optimal graft size is lacking.
Hypothesis/purpose: Here we aimed to determine the mean ACL, hamstring tendon, and posterior horn meniscal sizes in a Saudi population to determine whether correlations exist between anthropometric data and the widths of the ACL, hamstring tendons (specifically the gracilis and semitendinosus tendons), and medial and lateral meniscal posterior horns.
J Pediatr Orthop
March 2025
Orthopédie Traumatologie, Hôpital des Enfants, CHU de Toulouse, Toulouse, France.
Background: Pediatric anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (ACLR) in skeletally immature patients is still controversially debated, with several gaps in its literature. More information is needed about the role of concomitant meniscal injuries in postoperative outcomes and return to pre-injury sports level (RTS).
Methods: Fifty skeletally immature patients who underwent ACLR were enrolled prospectively: 21 had meniscal injury additionally, and 29 did not.
J Orthop Res
March 2025
Laboratory for Joint Tissue Repair and Regeneration, Orthopedic Soft Tissue Research Program, The Hospital for Special Surgery, New York, New York, USA.
The tendon graft is known to undergo a remodeling process after anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction. However, little is known about the transcriptional profile of this process. The aim of the present study is to identify differentially expressed genes inside the remodeling ACL graft in the early phase after ACL reconstruction in our murine model using RNA sequencing (RNAseq).
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