scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Long-term evaluation of knee stability and function following surgical reconstruction for anterior cruciate ligament insufficiency

TLDR
Development of new, more specific dynamic tests may be necessary before stronger rela tionships between clinical test results and patients' perceptions of knee status in the ACL reconstructed knee can be realized.
Abstract
Currently used measures of knee stability and function for ACL reconstructed knees have not gained universal acceptance. Clinical test results often are given more value than the patient's subjective evaluation of the surgical outcome. This study was designed to identify specific knee stability and function variables that were most predictive of the patient's rating of knee function following one of two types of combined (intraarticular and extraarticular) ACL reconstruction procedures. Individual measures of knee stability and function were also evaluated for differences between contralateral operated and nonoperated limbs. Postoperative and healthy contralateral knees of 51 male and female patients aged 18 to 49 years (mean, 23.7 years) were evaluated on a battery of tests at an average of 48.0 months after surgery (range, 24 to 101 months). All subjects possessed a normal contralateral knee for comparative purposes. The results of this retrospective study indicated that the variables selected were not highly correlated with, nor could they effectively predict, the patients' perceptions of postoperative knee status as measured by the Knee Function Rating Form (KFR). Statistically significant differences (P less than 0.001) between operated and nonoperated knees were found for 9 of 11 variables analyzed. The data suggest that patients' perceptions of postoperative knee status were independent of the results of static and dynamic clinical tests commonly used to assess knee stability and function. Postoperative deficits of up to 30% between the surgically reconstructed and normal contralateral knees on specific measures of knee stability and function did not greatly influence the patients' perceptions of knee function. Development of new, more specific dynamic tests may be necessary before stronger relationships between clinical test results and patients' perceptions of knee status in the ACL reconstructed knee can be realized.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Biomechanical Analysis of an Anatomic Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction

TL;DR: Anterior tibial translation for the anatomic reconstruction was significantly closer to that of the intact knee than was the single-bundle reconstruction, indicating that Anatomic reconstruction may produce a better biomechanical outcome, especially during rotatory loads.
Journal ArticleDOI

Abnormal Rotational Knee Motion During Running After Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction

TL;DR: Anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction failed to restore normal rotational knee kinematics during dynamic loading, and these abnormal motions may contribute to long-term joint degeneration associated with anterior cruciated ligament injury/reconstruction.
Journal ArticleDOI

Prospective evaluation of arthroscopically assisted anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction Patellar tendon versus semitendinosus and gracilis tendons

TL;DR: This study did find a statistically significant weakness in peak hamstrings torque at 60 deg/sec when recon struction was performed with double-looped semiten dinosus and gracilis tendons.
Journal ArticleDOI

Strength of the Quadriceps Femoris Muscle and Functional Recovery after Reconstruction of the Anterior Cruciate Ligament. A Prospective, Randomized Clinical Trial of Electrical Stimulation *

TL;DR: There was a clinically and statistically significant difference in the recovery of the quadriceps and the gait parameters according to the type of operation that had been performed: the patients who had had reconstruction of the anterior cruciate ligament with use of an autologous patellar-ligament graft did poorly compared with the other patients.
Journal ArticleDOI

Graft Site Morbidity with Autogenous Semitendinosus and Gracilis Tendons

TL;DR: It isstrated that the semitendinosus and gracilis tendon graft is a reasonable choice to minimize the donor site morbidity in ligament reconstruction using autografts.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

The symptomatic anterior cruciate-deficient knee. Part I: the long-term functional disability in athletically active individuals.

TL;DR: This study reports on the disability of 103 patients with symptomatic chronic laxity of the an tenor cruciate ligament that was uncomplicated by other associated major ligament deficiency or prior lig ament reconstructive procedures.
Journal ArticleDOI

Instrumented measurement of anterior laxity of the knee.

TL;DR: The authors performed instrumented measurement of anterior-posterior laxity of the knee in thirty-three cadaver specimens, 338 normal subjects, and eighty-nine patients with unilateral disruption of the anterior cruciate ligament, using the Medmetric knee arthrometer, model KT-2000.
Journal ArticleDOI

Isolated tear of the anterior cruciate ligament: 5-year follow-up study:

TL;DR: Following a 5-year follow-up study to determine the functional impairment, present disability, and reinjury to the knee, patients have progressive deterioration of the knee.
Journal ArticleDOI

Diagnosis of acute knee injuries with hemarthrosis

TL;DR: Acute knee injuries with hemarthrosis, rather than being a contraindication to arthroscopy, are in fact one of the best indications for use of this procedure.
Related Papers (5)