Factors associated with anterior knee pain 12 months follow hamstring tendon autograft ACL reconstruction

2014 ◽  
Vol 18 ◽  
pp. e44
Author(s):  
A. Culvenor ◽  
N. Collins ◽  
B. Vicenzino ◽  
J. Cook ◽  
T. Whitehead ◽  
...  
2018 ◽  
Vol 146 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 174-178
Author(s):  
Ozgur Korkmaz ◽  
Melih Malkoc

Introduction/Objective. The aim of this study was to evaluate the relationship between anterior knee pain and Insall-Salvati ratio after anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction with hamstring tendon. Methods. We have evaluate 39 patient that had an ACL reconstruction surgery with hamstring tendon retrospectively. 14 patient had anterior knee pain at the and of the first year of the surgery. All the patient were evaluated for Insall-Salvati ratio preoperatively and postoperatively. Patients were evaluated at the end of the first year after the surgery with Lysholm score and Tegner activity scale. Patients preoperative and postoperative measurements were analyzed by using the Wilcoxon test and differences between patients with anterior knee pain and without pain was analyzed by the Mann-Whitney U test. Results. Mean Insall-Salvati ratio was found preoperatively 0,91?0,1 and postoperatively 0,85?0,09 (p?0,05). Mean Tegner activity score was 8,56?1,04 and mean Lysholm score was 87,36?9,42 in the group without anterior knee pain. Mean Tegner activity score was 7,21?0,97 and mean Lysholm score was 74,43?9,94 in the group with anterior pain. There is an decrease in ?nsall-Salvati ratio as a result of the surgery. But patients with anterior knee pain had lower values of ?nsall-Salvati ratio preoperatively. Conclusion. Preoperatively low ?nsall-Salvati ratio can be premised indicator of anterior knee pain in the early period after ACL reconstruction with hamstring tendons. Mean Tegner activity score and mean Lysholm score have higher values in the group without anterior pain post operatively.


2019 ◽  
Vol 7 (3_suppl) ◽  
pp. 2325967119S0007
Author(s):  
Benton E. Heyworth ◽  
Elizabeth S. Liotta ◽  
Peter D. Fabricant ◽  
Ashley J. Tisosky ◽  
Cameron Waites ◽  
...  

Background: Anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (ACLR) remains one of the most commonly performed orthopaedic surgeries in adolescents and young adults. However, selection of the optimal graft for the individual patient remains controversial, considering multiple graft options, subtle technique differences, and wide-ranging bodies of evidence for each graft option in largely adult populations. However, multiple epidemiologic studies clearly demonstrate adolescents as the most greatly affected age-based sub-population, with the highest rates of re-tear and global morbidity, due to psychological and physical effects of long absences from athletic activity. Nevertheless, methodologically rigorous comparative studies specific to the adolescent athlete are largely absent from the literature. The purpose of the current study is to therefore investigate the outcomes of ACLR in adolescents receiving either patellar tendon/bone-tendon-bone (BTB) autograft (ACLR-BTB) or hamstring tendon autograft (ACLR-HS), using retrospective propensity score matching techniques to generate comparable cohorts. Methods: The study was designed as a retrospective chart review, with collection of cross-sectional data from a single pediatric tertiary care center over a thirteen year period (2003-2015). An initial cohort of patients, aged 13-19 years at time of primary ACLR-BTB or primary ACLR-HS by one of 5 surgeons, was identified through a comprehensive electronic medical record database query. Propensity score matching of ACLR-BTB and ACLR-HS subjects through a logistic regression model, with caliper restriction of 0.1 standard deviations, was then applied, based upon specific baseline characteristics that are frequently used by some surgeons to guide graft selection: age, sex, and body mass index (BMI). The resultant cohort of patients obtained a 1:2 (ACLR-BTB: ACLR-HS, 83 patients:186 patients) match. A chart review was performed to identify patient demographics, surgical data, and post-operative outcomes including graft rupture/re-tear and length of clinical follow-up. Patients were additionally contacted to obtain longer term sport participation and re-injury data that may have been investigated or addressed at outside institutions, as well as to obtain functional outcomes using region-specific questionnaires (Pedi-IKDC and HSS-Pedi FABS), which are validated for both this younger population and adult populations. Due to previous literature-based reports on greater anterior knee pain following ACLR-BTB, compared to ACL-HS, scores from the questions specific to knee pain or kneeling pain were extracted from the Pedi-IKDC results and analyzed to assess the potential influence of anterior knee pain on overall scores within this adolescent population. Results: At time of ACLR, the mean age and BMI of the matched ACLR-BTB patients were 17.1 years (sd: +/-1.14 years) and 25.8 (sd: +/-5.04), compared to 16.9 years (sd: +/- 1.38, p: 0.18) and 24.9 (sd: +/- 5.01, p: 0.18) for matched ACLR-HS patients, with similar male preponderance (ACLR-BTB: 77%, ACLR-HS: 72%, p: 0.47) and mean length of follow-up (ACLR-BTB: 42.9 months; ACLR-HS: 43.3 months). While mean Pedi-IKDC scores were slightly higher in the ACLR-BTB group (88.8; sd: +/-10.2, range: 56.5-100) than the ACLR-HS group (85.2; sd: +/- 16.1, range: 23.9-100), this difference was not statistically different (p: 0.50). When scores on questions regarding knee pain and kneeling difficulty were analyzed, no differences were seen between graft cohorts (ACLR-BTB: median knee pain score: 4, ACLR-HS: 4 p: 0.73; ACLR-BTB median kneeling difficulty score: 4, ACLR-HS: 4, p: 0.21). Activity level, based on the HSS-Pedi FABS score, was also similar (ACLR-BTB: 16, range: 3-29 vs. ACLR-HS: 17, range: 0-30; p: 0.96). Rates of ACL graft re-tear were not significantly different between groups, both when calculated based all possible follow-up methods (ACLR-BTB: 11%, ACLR-HS: 11%, p: 0.91), or when those patients responding to long-term follow up questionnaires were isolated (ACLR-BTB: 15%, ACLR-HS: 16%, p: 0.85). Conclusion/Significance: Despite previous studies, including large, multi-country registry-based analyses, demonstrating lower re-tear rates following ACLR-BTB than ACLR-HS, the current study, focused exclusively on adolescent cohorts matched for age, sex, and BMI, showed no difference in graft re-tear rates between the two cohorts at medium-term follow-up. Moreover, activity scores and functional knee outcome scores appear to be equivalent between these younger graft-based populations. In contrast to previous studies associating BTB autograft with greater long term anterior knee pain, adolescents appear to have equal degrees of knee pain or kneeling pain, regardless of graft choice, which may stem from greater healing and biologic remodeling capacity at graft harvest sites than adults or more modern techniques of patellar bone grafting and paratenon closure. Given the consistently high adolescent ACL re-tear rates in this and other studies, continued focus on ACL prevention programs and optimizing the timing and safety of return to play remains critical.


2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (12) ◽  
pp. 232596712097022
Author(s):  
Christian A. Cruz ◽  
Daniel Goldberg ◽  
Jeffrey Wake ◽  
Joshua Sy ◽  
Brian J. Mannino ◽  
...  

Background: Anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction (ACLR) using bone-tendon-bone (BTB) autograft is associated with increased postoperative anterior knee pain and pain with kneeling and has the risk of intra- and postoperative patellar fracture. Additionally, graft-tunnel mismatch is problematic, often leading to inadequate osseous fixation. Given the disadvantages of BTB, an alternative is a bone-tendon autograft (BTA) procedure that has been developed at our institution. BTA is a patellar tendon autograft with the single bone plug taken from the tibia. Purpose/Hypothesis: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the short-term outcomes of BTA ACLR. We hypothesized that this procedure will provide noninferior failure rates and clinical outcomes when compared with a BTB autograft, as well as a lower incidence of anterior knee pain, pain with kneeling, and patellar fracture. Methods: A consecutive series of 52 patients treated with BTA ACLR were retrospectively identified and compared with 50 age-matched patients who underwent BTB ACLR. The primary outcome was ACL graft failure, while secondary outcomes included subjective instability, anterior knee pain, kneeling pain, and functional outcome scores (Single Assessment Numeric Evaluation, Lysholm, and International Knee Documentation Committee subjective knee form). Results: At a mean follow-up of 29.3 months after surgery, there were 2 reruptures in the BTA cohort (4.0%) and 2 in the BTB cohort (4.0%). In the BTA group, 18% of patients reported anterior knee pain versus 36% of the BTB group ( P = .04). A total of 22% of patients noted pain or pressure with kneeling in the BTA cohort, as opposed to 48% in the BTB cohort ( P = .006). There were no differences in functional scores. In the BTA group, 94.2% of patients reported that their knees subjectively felt stable, as compared with 86% in the BTB group ( P = .18). Conclusion: This study demonstrated that the BTA ACLR leads to similarly low rates of ACL graft failure requiring revision surgery, with significantly decreased anterior knee pain and kneeling pain when compared with a BTB. Additionally, the potential complications of graft-tunnel mismatch and patellar fracture are eliminated with the BTA ACLR technique.


2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (10) ◽  
pp. 232596712096108
Author(s):  
Fabiano da Silva Marques ◽  
Pedro Henrique Borges Barbosa ◽  
Pedro Rodrigues Alves ◽  
Sandro Zelada ◽  
Rodrigo Pereira da Silva Nunes ◽  
...  

Background: Anterior knee pain is a frequent condition after anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (ACLR), but its origin remains uncertain. Studies have suggested that donor site morbidity in autologous bone–patellar tendon–bone reconstructions may contribute to patellofemoral pain, but this does not explain why hamstring tendon reconstructions may also present with anterior pain. Purpose: To evaluate the prevalence of anterior knee pain after ACLR and its predisposing factors. Study Design: Case-control study; Level of evidence, 3. Methods: We evaluated the records of all patients who underwent ACLR between 2000 and 2016 at a private facility. The prevalence of anterior knee pain after surgery was assessed, and possible risk factors (graft type, patient sex, surgical technique, range of motion) were evaluated. Results: The records of 438 patients (mean age, 30 years) who underwent ACLR were analyzed. Anterior knee pain was found in 6.2% of the patients. We found an increased prevalence of anterior knee pain with patellar tendon graft, with an odds ratio of 3.4 ( P = .011). Patients who experienced extension deficit in the postoperative period had an odds ratio of 5.3 of having anterior pain ( P < .001). Anterior knee pain was not correlated with patient sex or surgical technique. Conclusion: The chance of having anterior knee pain after ACLR was higher when patellar tendon autograft was used compared with hamstring tendon graft, as well as in patients who experienced extension deficit in the postoperative period.


2017 ◽  
Vol 46 (3) ◽  
pp. 531-543 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lucy J. Salmon ◽  
Emma Heath ◽  
Hawar Akrawi ◽  
Justin P. Roe ◽  
James Linklater ◽  
...  

Background: No well-controlled studies have compared the long-term outcome of anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction with hamstring tendon autograft between adolescents and adults. Increased posterior tibial slopes (PTSs) have been reported in the ACL-injured versus controls, but the effect of PTS on the outcome after reconstruction is relatively unexplored. Purpose: To compare the prospective longitudinal outcome of “isolated” ACL ruptures treated with anatomic endoscopic ACL reconstruction using hamstring tendon autograft over 20 years in adolescent and adult cohorts and to examine factors for repeat ACL injury. Study Design: Case-control study; Level of evidence, 3. Methods: A single-surgeon series of 200 consecutive patients undergoing isolated primary ACL reconstruction with hamstring tendon autograft were prospectively studied. Subjects were assessed preoperatively and at 2, 7, 15, and 20 years postoperatively. Outcomes included International Knee Documentation Committee (IKDC) Knee Evaluation, IKDC subjective scores, KT-1000 instrumented laxity testing, and radiological evaluation of degenerative change and medial tibial slope. Twenty-year outcomes were compared between those who underwent surgery at the age of 18 years or younger (adolescent group, n = 39) and those who underwent surgery when older than 18 years (adult group, n = 161). Results: At 20 years, 179 of 200 subjects were reviewed (89.5%). ACL graft rupture occurred in 37 subjects and contralateral ACL injury in 22 subjects. Of those with intact ACL grafts at 20 years, outcomes were not statistically different between adolescents and adults for the variables of IKDC subjective score ( P = .29), return to preinjury activity level ( P = .84), current activity level ( P = .69), or degree of radiological degenerative change at 20 years ( P = .51). The adolescent group had a higher proportion of grade 1 ligamentous laxity testing compared with the adult group ( P = .003). Overall, ACL graft survival at 20 years was 86% for adults and 61% for adolescents (hazard ration, 3.3; P = .001). The hazard for ACL graft rupture was increased by 4.8 in adolescent males and 2.5 in adolescent females compared with adults. At 20 years, the ACL survival for adolescents with a PTS of ≥12° was 22%. The hazard for ACL graft rupture was increased by 11 in adolescents with a PTS of ≥12° ( P = .001) compared with adults with a PTS <12°. Conclusion: Repeat ACL injury after isolated ACL reconstruction is common, occurring in 1 in 3 over 20 years. In the absence of further injury, isolated ACL reconstruction using this technique was associated with good long-term outcomes with respect to patient-reported outcomes and return to sports, regardless of age. However, mild ligament laxity and ACL graft rupture after ACL reconstruction are significantly more common in adolescents, especially adolescent males, compared with adults. PTS of 12° or more is the strongest predictor of repeat ACL injury, and its negative effect is most pronounced in adolescents.


2019 ◽  
Vol 7 (11_suppl6) ◽  
pp. 2325967119S0045
Author(s):  
Andri Lubis

Hamstring grafts are the most often grafts used for ACL reconstruction procedures. Especially in Asia, hamstrings are preferable since small incision for taking the graft, and not produce anterior knee pain during kneeling, since there is no bony part taken. However, sometimes hamstring is too small for the graft. Many literatures mention that at least 7-8 mm needed for the best result of ACL reconstruction using hamstring tendon. It is not easy to predict the size of the hamstring tendon before surgery. Quadriceps tendons are good alternative as the grafts for ACL reconstruction. However, sometimes surgeons realize that hamstring is too small after they took the hamstring. The peroneus longus tendon can be added to the small hamstring. Even though peroneus longus tendon should not be used routinely, it could be considered if the hamstring that has been taken is too small.


2015 ◽  
Vol 43 (9) ◽  
pp. 2182-2188 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andreas Persson ◽  
Asle B. Kjellsen ◽  
Knut Fjeldsgaard ◽  
Lars Engebretsen ◽  
Birgitte Espehaug ◽  
...  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document