scholarly journals The Impact of Aspiration and Corticosteroid Injection after ACL Injury on Post-Reconstruction Infection Rate (161)

2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (10_suppl5) ◽  
pp. 2325967121S0028
Author(s):  
William Cantrell ◽  
Steven Swinehart ◽  
Carrie Johnson ◽  
Greg Strnad ◽  
Nancy Obuchowski ◽  
...  

Objectives: Knee injections of bioactive substances, including corticosteroids, hyaluronic acid, and platelet-rich-plasma, are very common in orthopaedic practice. Recently, injecting a corticosteroid into the knee after an anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury has been shown in a pilot randomized controlled trial to mitigate articular cartilage damage from the pro-inflammatory effects of the hemearthrosis.1 It is imperative to know if injecting a corticosteroid after ACL tear increases the risk of infection after ACL reconstruction (ACLR). The objective of this study is to report the infection rate in a retrospective cohort of primary bone-tendon-bone (BTB) ACLR patients of one fellowship-trained sports medicine orthopaedic surgeon’s practice where post-injury aspiration and corticosteroid injection occurred prior to ACLR. 1. Lattermann, C. et al. A Multicenter Study of Early Anti-inflammatory Treatment in Patients With Acute Anterior Cruciate Ligament Tear. The American Journal of Sports Medicine 45, 325–333 (2017). Methods: All patients from the ages of 10-65 who underwent primary BTB autograft ACLR by one fellowship-trained sports medicine orthopaedic surgeon between 1/1/2011 and 3/1/2019 at two institutions were reviewed. The variables reviewed were if there was a postoperative infection (as defined by undergoing an intra-articular irrigation and debridement reoperation), if there were any positive cultures, and the medications of the post-injury intra-articular injection (corticosteroid).The time between the following events was also recorded: initial injury and initial presentation, initial injury and corticosteroid injection, injection and ACLR, and ACLR and last date of follow-up. Statistical analysis determined the upper 95% confidence bound for infection probability for the three main groups of the study: the entire cohort, the cohort who underwent post-injury preoperative aspiration and injection, and the cohort who did not undergo aspiration and injection. This statistical approach was taken to determine with 95% confidence the upper limit of what the infection risk would likely be in each group. Results: There were 518 primary BTB ACLR performed with follow-up on 79% (410/518). 174 were found to have undergone a post-injury aspiration and injection, leaving 236 who did not. There were no infections (washout reoperations or positive cultures) in the entire 410 case group. The upper 95% confidence bound for the probability of a postoperative infection is shown in three left columns in table 1 was 0.7% for the whole cohort (n= 410), 1.7% for the cohort who underwent aspiration and injection (n=174), and 1.3% for the cohort that did not (n= 236). Table 1 compares our study to the ACLR infection rate from MOON ADDIN ZOTERO_ITEM CSL_CITATION{"citationID":"XkJTnLOw","properties":{"formattedCitation":"\\super2\\nosupersub{}","plainCitation":"2","noteIndex":0},"citationItems":[{"id":2186,"uris":["http://zotero.org/users/2554704/items/N87NRZ9H"],"uri":["http://zotero.org/users/2554704/items/N87NRZ9H"],"itemData":{"id":2186,"type":"article-journal","container-title":"TheJournal of Bone and Joint Surgery","DOI":"10.2106/JBJS.N.00694","ISSN":"0021-9355","issue":"6","language":"en","page":"450-454","source":"Crossref","title":"FactorsAssociated with Infection Following Anterior Cruciate LigamentReconstruction:","title-short":"Factors Associated withInfection Following Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction","volume":"97","author":[{"family":"Brophy","given":"RobertH."},{"family":"Wright","given":"RickW."},{"family":"Huston","given":"LauraJ."},{"family":"Nwosu","given":"SamuelK."},{"family":"Spindler","given":"KurtP."},{"family":"Kaeding","given":"ChristopherC."},{"family":"Parker","given":"RichardD."},{"family":"Andrish","given":"JackT."},{"family":"Marx","given":"RobertG."},{"family":"Amendola","given":"Annunziato"},{"family":"Wolf","given":"BrianR."},{"family":"McCarty","given":"EricC."},{"family":"Dunn","given":"WarrenR."}],"issued":{"date-parts":[["2015",3]]}}}],"schema":"https://github.com/citation-style-language/schema/raw/master/csl-citation.json"}2 . The infection rate for the entire MOON cohort is 0.8% (allograft and autograft), the BTB autograft is 0.3%, and the hamstring autograft is1.3%. In our injection group, the mean time between injury and aspiration and injection was 7.6 days. The mean time elapsed between the date of aspiration and injection and the surgical date was 48.9 days. 2. Brophy, R. H. et al. Factors Associated with Infection Following Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction: The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery 97, 450–454 (2015). Conclusions: Our data show that aspiration and injection with corticosteroids following ACL injury does not greatly increase post-operative infection risk. This can be observed when comparing the MOON BTB published rate of 0.3% to the upper limit of infection in our entire cohort, which is 0.7% (see Table 1). The difference in upper 95% confidence limits among our three groups is the result of sample size for each cohort. Even in the worst-case scenario for the preoperative injection group, which has the smallest sample size of 174, the upper 95% CI is 1.7%. This is only 1% higher than the confidence bound calculated for the entire MOON cohort (0.7%). When comparing this finding with the MOON autograft hamstring graft infection rate (1.3%) compared to the BTB infection rate (0.3%), the known 1% difference does not alter practice. The results of this study support a very minimal risk of postoperative infection after ACLR with or without a post-injury aspiration and corticosteroid injection, at most potentially 1%.

Author(s):  
Nicholas Vaudreuil ◽  
Justin Roe ◽  
Lucy Salmon ◽  
Elvire Servien ◽  
Carola van Eck

Female athletes represent a unique challenge for sports medicine providers. Care for skeletally mature female athletes requires an understanding of the distinct physiology, risk factors and injury patterns that have been described in this population. Anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injuries are commonly observed in female athletes, especially in high-risk sports such as soccer, basketball, lacrosse and volleyball. Women have been shown to be at a higher risk for ACL injury compared with their male peers, even competing in the same sport. Several factors must be considered when discussing the increased risk of ACL injuries in women. Anatomic factors and altered landing mechanics alignment contribute to increased forces seen at the ACL. A variety of other factors including altered neuromuscular profiles, hormonal factors and genetic factors may all play a role in increased predisposition towards ACL injury. Prevention strategies for ACL such as proprioceptive training may be helpful, especially for at-risk activities such as landing and cutting drills. Optimal surgical management including graft choice is an area of debate. Postoperatively, return to sport protocols are not well standardised for female athletes. Women have a lower return to sport frequency, and psychological factors such as fear of reinjury are often cited as a predominant factor. Overall, the influence of female gender on ACL injury treatment has been an area of heavy research recently. However, more research is needed to elicit the reasons for physical and psychological differences between men and women in order to clarify optimal postoperative management.


2014 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ehsan Saadat ◽  
Emily J. Curry ◽  
Xinning Li ◽  
Elizabeth G. Matzkin

Unilateral anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) tear is a common injury seen by sports medicine orthopedic surgeons. However, a bilateral simultaneous ACL injury is extremely rare and has been reported only three times in the literature. We present a young female skier with simultaneous bilateral ACL tears that were managed with staged ACL reconstruction. We then conducted a nationwide survey (United States) to determine the prevalence of simultaneous bilateral ACL tear and preferred management strategies by sports medicine orthopedic surgeons. Sports medicine fellowship directors were contacted and asked to send an 8-item survey to colleagues (sports medicine fellowship trained surgeons) asking about overall number of ACL reconstructions performed, number of bilateral simultaneous ACL injuries seen and optimal management strategies of such an injury. Out of 43 responses, only 22 (51.2%) surgeons had seen a bilateral simultaneous ACL injury. Of these, 16 (76.2%) preferred staged reconstruction. Graft choice was mixed between autograft and allograft, but a large majority preferred either patellar tendon autograft (58%) or hamstring autograft (41%) were the most common choice. Staged reconstruction is the treatment of choice by surgeons surveyed in our study.


Diagnostics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (6) ◽  
pp. 997
Author(s):  
Alessandro de Sire ◽  
Nicola Marotta ◽  
Andrea Demeco ◽  
Lucrezia Moggio ◽  
Pasquale Paola ◽  
...  

Anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury incidence is often underestimated in tennis players, who are considered as subjects conventionally less prone to knee injuries. However, evaluation of the preactivation of knee stabilizer muscles by surface electromyography (sEMG) showed to be a predictive value in the assessment of the risk of ACL injury. Therefore, this proof-of-concept study aimed at evaluating the role of visual input on the thigh muscle preactivation through sEMG to reduce ACL injury risk in tennis players. We recruited male, adult, semiprofessional tennis players from July to August 2020. They were asked to drop with the dominant lower limb from a step, to evaluate—based on dynamic valgus stress—the preactivation time of the rectus femoris (RF), vastus medialis, biceps femoris, and medial hamstrings (MH), through sEMG. To highlight the influence of visual inputs, the athletes performed the test blindfolded and not blindfolded on both clay and grass surfaces. We included 20 semiprofessional male players, with a mean age 20.3 ± 4.8 years; results showed significant early muscle activation when the subject lacked visual input, but also when faced with a less-safe surface such as clay over grass. Considering the posteromedial–anterolateral relationship (MH/RF ratio), tennis players showed a significant higher MH/RF ratio if blindfolded (22.0 vs. 17.0% not blindfolded; p < 0.01) and percentage of falling on clay (17.0% vs. 14.0% in grass; p < 0.01). This proof-of-principle study suggests that in case of absence of visual input or falling on a surface considered unsafe (clay), neuro-activation would tend to protect the anterior stress of the knee. Thus, the sEMG might play a crucial role in planning adequate athletic preparation for semiprofessional male athletes in terms of reduction of ACL injury risk.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (11) ◽  
pp. 4958
Author(s):  
Alessandro de Sire ◽  
Andrea Demeco ◽  
Nicola Marotta ◽  
Lucrezia Moggio ◽  
Arrigo Palumbo ◽  
...  

Neuromuscular warm-up has been shown to decrease the risk of anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury improving muscular firing patterns. All preventive training programs described in the literature have a duration of several weeks. To date, no studies have explored the immediate effect of a neuromuscular warm-up exercise on pre-activation time of the knee stabilizer muscles. Thus, this proof-of-principle study aimed at evaluating the acute effects of a neuromuscular warm-up exercises on the electromyographic activation of knee stabilizer muscles’ activation pattern. We included 11 professional football players, mean aged 23.2 ± 4.5 years, from a Southern Italy football team. All of them underwent a standard warm-up exercise protocol at the first day of the evaluation. At 1 week, they underwent a structured neuromuscular warm-up exercise protocol. We assessed as outcome measure the pre-activation time (ms) of rectus femoris (RF), vastus medialis (VM), biceps femoris (BF), and medial hamstrings (MH) upon landing. Outcomes were assessed before and after the standard warm-up and neuromuscular warm-up. Pre-activation time of RF, VM, BF and MH significantly improved only after neuromuscular warm-up (p < 0.05); moreover, there was a significant (p < 0.05) between-group difference in pre-activation time of all muscles after the neuromuscular warm-up compared with the standard warm-up. These findings suggested that physical exercise consisting of a structured injury prevention neuromuscular warm-up might have an immediate effect in improving the activation time of the knee stabilizer muscles, thus potentially reducing the risk of ACL injury.


2021 ◽  
pp. 194173812110295
Author(s):  
Patrick Ward ◽  
Peter Chang ◽  
Logan Radtke ◽  
Robert H. Brophy

Background: Anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) tears are common injuries; they are often associated with concomitant injuries to other structures in the knee, including bone bruises. While there is limited evidence that bone bruises are associated with slightly worse clinical outcomes, the implications of bone bruises for the articular cartilage and the risk of developing osteoarthritis (OA) in the knee are less clear. Recent studies suggest that the bone bruise pattern may be helpful in predicting the presence of meniscal ramp lesions. Evidence Acquisition: A literature review was performed in EMBASE using the keyword search phrase (acl OR (anterior AND cruciate AND ligament)) AND ((bone AND bruise) OR (bone AND contusion) OR (bone AND marrow AND edema) OR (bone AND marrow AND lesion) OR (subchondral AND edema)). Study Design: Clinical review. Level of Evidence: Level 4. Results: The literature search returned 93 articles of which 25 were ultimately included in this review. Most studies identified a high prevalence of bone bruises in the setting of acute ACL injury. Individual studies have found relationships between bone bruise volume and functional outcomes; however, these results were not supported by systematic review. Similarly, the literature has contradictory findings on the relationship between bone bruises and the progression of OA after ACL reconstruction. Investigations into concomitant injury found anterolateral ligament and meniscal ramp lesions to be associated with bone bruise presence on magnetic resonance imaging. Conclusion: Despite the ample literature identifying the prevalence of bone bruises in association with ACL injury, there is little evidence to correlate bone bruises to functional outcomes or progression of OA. Bone bruises may best be used as a marker for concomitant injury such as medial meniscal ramp lesions that are not always well visualized on magnetic resonance imaging. Further research is required to establish the longitudinal effects of bone bruises on ACL tear recovery. Strength of Recommendation Taxonomy: 2.


Sensors ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (7) ◽  
pp. 2331
Author(s):  
Stefano Di Paolo ◽  
Nicola Francesco Lopomo ◽  
Francesco Della Villa ◽  
Gabriele Paolini ◽  
Giulio Figari ◽  
...  

The aim of the present study was to quantify joint kinematics through a wearable sensor system in multidirectional high-speed complex movements used in a protocol for rehabilitation and return to sport assessment after Anterior Cruciate Ligament (ACL) injury, and to validate it against a gold standard optoelectronic marker-based system. Thirty-four healthy athletes were evaluated through a full-body wearable sensor (MTw Awinda, Xsens) and a marker-based optoelectronic (Vicon Nexus, Vicon) system during the execution of three tasks: drop jump, forward sprint, and 90° change of direction. Clinically relevant joint angles of lower limbs and trunk were compared through Pearson’s correlation coefficient (r), and the Coefficient of Multiple Correlation (CMC). An excellent agreement (r > 0.94, CMC > 0.96) was found for knee and hip sagittal plane kinematics in all the movements. A fair-to-excellent agreement was found for frontal (r 0.55–0.96, CMC 0.63–0.96) and transverse (r 0.45–0.84, CMC 0.59–0.90) plane kinematics. Movement complexity slightly affected the agreement between the systems. The system based on wearable sensors showed fair-to-excellent concurrent validity in the evaluation of the specific joint parameters commonly used in rehabilitation and return to sport assessment after ACL injury for complex movements. The ACL professionals could benefit from full-body wearable technology in the on-field rehabilitation of athletes.


Author(s):  
Bahram Amirshakeri ◽  
Minoo Khalkhali Zavieh ◽  
Mandana Rezaei ◽  
Hakimeh Adigozali

BACKGROUND: Force perception as a contributor to the neuromuscular control of the knee joint may be altered after anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury. OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to compare the force perception accuracy in the knee joints of patients with ACL injury and healthy subjects. METHODS: Twenty-six patients with ACL injury and 26 healthy subjects participated in this case-control study. Participants were asked to produce 50% of the maximum voluntary isometric contraction of the knee muscles as a target force and reproduce it in their limbs in flexion and extension directions. RESULTS: There were significant interactions between group and condition as well as group, condition, and limb in the force perception error respectively (P< 0.05). The highest amount of error was seen in the contralateral limb of the ACL injury group when the reference force was produced in the injured limb (P< 0.05). CONCLUSION: The findings revealed that the force perception accuracy in the knee flexor/extensor muscles of individuals with ACL injury is impaired. Moreover, error is most evident when the patient produces force in the injured limb and replicates it in the uninjured limb in both flexion and extension directions. Therefore, the rehabilitation programs should encompass neuromuscular training in both quadriceps and hamstrings after ACL injury.


2021 ◽  
pp. 194173812110253
Author(s):  
Christopher Kuenze ◽  
Katherine Collins ◽  
Karin Allor Pfeiffer ◽  
Caroline Lisee

Context: Return to sport is widely utilized by sports medicine researchers and clinicians as a primary outcome of interest for successful recovery when working with young patients who have undergone anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction (ACLR). While return-to-sport outcomes are effective at tracking progress post-ACLR, they are limited because they do not necessarily capture physical activity (PA) engagement, which is important to maintain knee joint health and reduce the risk of noncommunicable diseases. Therefore, there is a critical need (1) to describe current PA participation and measurement recommendations; (2) to appraise common PA measurement approaches, including patient-reported outcomes and device-based methodologies; and (3) to provide clinical recommendations for future evaluation. Evidence Acquisition: Reports of patient-reported or device-based PA in patients with ACL injury were acquired and summarized based on a PubMed search (2000 through July 2020). Search terms included physical activity OR activity AND anterior cruciate ligament OR ACL. Study Design: Clinical review. Level of Evidence: Level 5. Results: We highlight that (1) individuals with ACLR are 2.36 times less likely to meet the US Department of Health and Human Services PA recommendations even when reporting successful return to sport, (2) common patient-reported PA assessments have significant limitations in the data that can be derived, and (3) alternative patient-reported and device-based assessments may provide improved assessment of PA in this patient population. Conclusion: Clinicians and researchers have relied on return to sport status or self-reported PA participation via surveys. These approaches are not consistent with current recommendations for PA assessment and do not allow for comparison with contemporary PA recommendations or guidelines. Return to sport, patient-reported outcome measures, and device-based assessment approaches should be used in complementary manners to comprehensively assess PA participation after ACLR. However, appropriate techniques should be used when assessing PA in adult and adolescent populations.


2012 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 506-510 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rory Norris ◽  
Pete Thompson ◽  
Alan Getgood

Anterior cruciate ligament rupture (ACL) is a common injury, particularly among young sporting adults. Early onset osteoarthritis (OA) can be a devastating and difficult to manage consequence of such an injury. The techniques for reconstructing the ACL are advancing all the time, but the effect that this has on the progression of OA is less well understood. Many factors affect the development of OA following an ACL injury, including direct and indirect trauma to the articular cartilage, associated meniscal injuries, chronic tibiofemoral joint instability, and multiple enzymatic pathways. This review will summarize the current evidence surrounding each of these areas, and describe some of the recent developments that may have an impact on the management of these injuries in the future.


Author(s):  
Amy Cochran ◽  
Yingxin Gao ◽  
Ursula Krotscheck ◽  
Margret Thompson ◽  
James Stouffer ◽  
...  

Optimal prevention and treatment strategies of anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury can be realized with a detailed understanding of how physiological factors impact the ACL. A noninvasive, in vivo method that assesses the ACL’s mechanical integrity is needed to help clarify this multi-factorial pathophysiology. We investigated the use of the noninvasive, in vivo technique, ultrasound strain elastography (USE) (1), to distinguish between normal and injured ACLs. USE is used as a diagnostic tool in oncological (2), hepatic (3), and cardiovascular (4) applications. This technique uses ultrasonic RF data to track tissue motion in order to estimate strain within the tissue.


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