Arthroscopic-assisted simultaneous reconstruction of the posterior cruciate ligament and the lateral collateral ligament using hamstrings and absorbable screws

Author(s):  
Helmut Lill ◽  
Stefan Glasmacher ◽  
Jan Korner ◽  
Tim Rose ◽  
Peter Verheyden ◽  
...  
2007 ◽  
Vol 35 (7) ◽  
pp. 1117-1122 ◽  
Author(s):  
Keith L. Markolf ◽  
Benjamin R. Graves ◽  
Susan M. Sigward ◽  
Steven R. Jackson ◽  
David R. McAllister

Background With grade 3 posterolateral injuries of the knee, reconstructions of the lateral collateral ligament, popliteus tendon, and popliteofibular ligament are commonly performed in conjunction with a posterior cruciate ligament reconstruction to restore knee stability. Hypothesis A lateral collateral ligament reconstruction, alone or with a popliteus tendon or popliteofibular ligament reconstruction, will produce normal varus rotation patterns and restore posterior cruciate ligament graft forces to normal levels in response to an applied varus moment. Study Design Controlled laboratory study. Methods Forces in the native posterior cruciate ligament were recorded for 15 intact knees during passive extension from 120° to 0° with an applied 5 N·m varus moment. The posterior cruciate ligament was removed and reconstructed with a single bundle inlay graft tensioned to restore intact knee laxity at 90°. Posterior cruciate ligament graft force, varus rotation, and tibial rotation were recorded before and after a grade 3 posterolateral corner injury. Testing was repeated with lateral collateral ligament, lateral collateral ligament plus popliteus tendon, and lateral collateral ligament plus popliteofibular ligament graft reconstructions; all grafts were tensioned to 30 N at 30° with the tibia locked in neutral rotation. Results All 3 posterolateral graft combinations rotated the tibia into slight valgus as the knee was taken through a passive range of motion. During the varus test, popliteus tendon and popliteofibular ligament reconstructions internally rotated the tibia from 1.5° (0° flexion) to approximately 12° (45° flexion). With an applied varus moment, mean varus rotations with a lateral collateral ligament graft were significantly less than those with the intact lateral collateral ligament beyond 0° flexion; mean decreases ranged from 0.8° (at 5° flexion) to 5.6° (at 120° flexion). Addition of a popliteus tendon or popliteofibular ligament graft further reduced varus rotation (compared with a lateral collateral ligament graft) beyond 25° of flexion; both grafts had equal effects. A lateral collateral ligament reconstruction alone restored posterior cruciate ligament graft forces to normal levels between 0° and 100° of flexion; lateral collateral ligament plus popliteus tendon and lateral collateral ligament plus popliteofibular ligament reconstructions reduced posterior cruciate ligament graft forces to below-normal levels—beyond 95° and 85° of flexion, respectively. Conclusions With a grade 3 posterolateral corner injury, popliteus tendon or popliteofibular ligament reconstructions are commonly performed to limit external tibial rotation; we found that they also limited varus rotation. With the graft tensioning protocols used in this study, all posterolateral graft combinations tested overconstrained varus rotation. Further studies with posterolateral reconstructions are required to better restore normal kinematics and provide more optimum load sharing between the PCL graft and posterolateral grafts. Clinical Relevance A lower level of posterolateral graft tension, perhaps applied at a different flexion angle, may be indicated to better restore normal varus stability. The clinical implications of overconstraining varus rotation are unknown.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiota Nusia ◽  
Jia Cheng Xu ◽  
Reimert Sjöblom ◽  
Johan Knälmann ◽  
Astrid Linder ◽  
...  

Aim: The purpose of this study was to develop Injury Risk Functions (IRFs) for the Anterior- and Posterior Cruciate Ligament (ACL and PCL, respectively) and the Medial- and Lateral Collateral Ligament (MCL and LCL, respectively) in the knee joint and address two injury mechanisms of the ligaments, mid-substance failure and ligament insertion detachment. Method: The IRFs were developed from Post-Mortem Human Subject (PMHS) tensile failure strains of Bone-Ligament-Bone (BLB) or dissected Ligament (LIG) preparations. To compensate for insufficient sample size of experimental datapoints, virtual failure strains were as well generated based on mean- and standard deviation from experiments that did not provide specimen-specific results. All virtual and specimen-specific values were then categorised into groups of static and dynamic rates and tested for the best fitting theoretical distribution to formulate the ligament IRF. Results: Nine IRFs were derived (3 for ACL, 2 for PCL, 1 for MCL and 3 for LCL). Conclusion: These IRFs are, to the best of the authors' knowledge, the first knee ligament injury predicting tool based on PMHS data. The IRFs of BLB address both failure modes of mid-ligament and attachment failure, while the IRFs of LIG address mid-ligament failures only. The proposed risk functions can be used to determine the effectiveness of injury prevention measures. Keywords: Injury risk functions, knee ligaments, anterior cruciate ligament, posterior cruciate ligament, medial collateral ligament, lateral collateral ligament.


2019 ◽  
Vol 16 (6) ◽  
pp. 489-492 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leonardo Adeo Ramos ◽  
Tiago Zogbi ◽  
Edilson Ferreira de Andrade ◽  
Gabriel Taniguti de Oliveira ◽  
Alexandre Pedro Nicolini ◽  
...  

1998 ◽  
Vol 26 (5) ◽  
pp. 656-662 ◽  
Author(s):  
Harrison A. Latimer ◽  
James E. Tibone ◽  
Neal S. ElAttrache ◽  
Patrick J. McMahon

This is a retrospective study of 10 patients with combined cruciate ligament and posterolateral instability who underwent surgical reconstruction between 1991 and 1994. All knees had at least 20° increased external rotation at 30° of knee flexion and from 1 to 3 varus instability. Five knees with posterior cruciate ligament ruptures had at least a 2 Lachman test result. (One knee had both anterior and posterior cruciate ligament injuries.) In all cases the lateral collateral ligament was reconstructed with a bone-patellar tendon-bone allograft secured with interference screws. Fixation tunnels were placed in the fibular head and at the isometric point on the femur. The cruciate ligaments were reconstructed with autograft or allograft material. The average follow-up was 28 months. Excessive external rotation at 30° of flexion was corrected in all but one knee. Six patients had no varus laxity, and four patients had 1 varus laxity at 30° of flexion. The posterior drawer test result decreased, on average, to 1 , and the Lachman test result decreased to between 0 and 1 . The average Tegner score was 4.6, with five patients returning to their preinjury level of activity and four returning to one level lower. These results indicate that this is a promising new procedure for patients with instability resulting from lateral ligament injuries of the knee.


1992 ◽  
Vol 05 (04) ◽  
pp. 158-162 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Blackketter ◽  
J Harari ◽  
J. Dupuis

Bone/lateral collateral ligament/bone preparations were tested and structural mechanical properties compared to properties of cranial cruciate ligament in 15 dogs. The lateral collateral ligament has sufficient stiffness to provide stifle joint stability and strength to resist acute overload following fibular head transposition.


2019 ◽  
Vol 7 ◽  
pp. 2050313X1882310
Author(s):  
Tsuneari Takahashi ◽  
Tomohiro Matsumura ◽  
Kazuaki Ishihara ◽  
Shuhei Hiyama ◽  
Katsushi Takeshita

Knee dislocation with concomitant multiligament injury is a rare and devastating injury. We report the successful repair of a rare case of open knee dislocation with concomitant multiligament injury and patellar tendon rupture of an 18-year-old male due to a motorcycle accident. The patient presented with an open wound running parallel to the knee joint line and patellar tendon rupture with full exposure of the cartilage of the distal femur. Staged surgical management including the application of a ring-type external fixator with a hinged joint, lateral collateral ligament repair, medial collateral ligament reconstruction using autogenous hamstring tendon, and joint release was performed. Range of movement was recovered to 0 degrees of knee extension and 80 degrees of knee flexion, and extension lag was negative. The Lysholm score of the patient was recovered to 92. The patient was able to return to work in the construction field 2 years after sustaining the injury. The patient had no complaint of pain and was able to resume construction work, even though reconstruction of the anterior cruciate ligament and posterior cruciate ligament was not performed. The application of a hinged ring-type external fixation device might play a key role in early range of movement restoration and to maintain the reduced position and acceptable recovery of the posterior cruciate ligament injury without the need for reconstructive surgery. This report is the first to describe the safety and effectiveness of staged surgical management for the repair of open knee dislocation with concomitant multiligament injury and patellar tendon rupture. However, further studies with longer follow-up periods will be needed to observe the development of osteoarthritis or weakness of the knee. Staged surgical management is a safe and effective procedure for repairing an open knee dislocation with concomitant multiligament injury and patellar tendon rupture.


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