Introduction. Perception of
Background: Anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury and re-injury rates are high and continue to rise in adolescents. After surgical reconstruction, less than 50% of patients return to their pre-injury level of physical activity. Clearance for return-to-play and rehabilitation progression typically requires assessment of performance during functional tests. Pain may impact this performance. However, the patient's level of pain is often overlooked during these assessments. Purpose: To investigate the level of pain during functional tests in adolescents with
Anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) ruptures are debilitating injuries, often managed via ACL reconstruction (ACLR). Reduced range of motion (ROM), particularly loss of extension (LOE), is the most significant contributor to post-operative patient dissatisfaction. LOE may preclude return to sport, increase re-rupture rates and precipitate osteoarthritis. Passive LOE rates following ACLR have been reported at 15%. However, LOE incidence during active tasks are poorly characterised. Our review sought to determine knee extension angles for active tasks following an
Limb symmetry on a battery of functional tests is becoming more common as a clinical rehabilitation tool serving as a proxy assessment for readiness to return to sport following anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (ACLR). The predictive capability of each included test for determining the likelihood of a second
A quick, portable and reliable tool for predicting
Anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injuries are frequent among athletes and a leading cause of time away from competition. Stability of the knee involves the ACL for limiting anterior tibial translation and the ALL (anterolateral ligament) to restrain internal rotation of the tibia. Present indications for treatment with a combined ACL-ALL reconstruction remain unclear and mostly subjective. We mathematically modeled the tibial plateau geometry to try and identify patients at risk of
A method is proposed to assess risk parameters of anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury using human pose estimation (HPE) and a single stereo depth camera. Detectron2 is used to identify key points of a subject performing a single leg jump test. This allows dynamic pivot of the knee to be assessed during landing using four risk parameters: knee valgus, knee translation in the coronal plane, pelvic tilt, and head-ankle alignment (body sway). Results show the model has an accuracy of 7° in angular measurements and 38 mm in linear measurements. Compared to previous studies, which only consider front-on analysis, this method has partially reduced accuracy in linear measurements and half the accuracy in angular measurements. Despite this, coupling information from multiple risk parameters reduces the accuracy required on any one parameter and the use of a single depth camera enables reliable analysis at a subject orientation of ±45° relative to the camera. These factors create a novel solution, proposing the ability for broad evaluation of ACL risk parameters in environments outside a testing laboratory, which has not been done before.
The aim of this study was to determine Anterior Cruciate Ligament (ACL) graft and contralateral ACL (CACL) survival in patients who have undergone ACL reconstruction (ACLR) with hamstring autograft following netball injuries, and determine factors associated with repeat
Several studies have highlighted the relationship between anterior cruciate (ACL) injury and knee geometry particularly tibial slope (TS). However, clinical data are inconsistent, whether the lateral or medial or slopes have a different influence on
The bone-patellar tendon-bone (BTB) autograft has a lower rate of graft failure but a higher rate of contralateral anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury after primary ACL reconstruction. Subsequent contralateral injury may be a marker of success of the BTB graft, but it is unclear whether the type of graft influences the rate of return to sport. This study aimed to compare the rates of return to weekly sport and return to preinjury activity levels between the BTB and hamstring tendon autografts following primary ACL reconstruction. Prospective data on primary ACL reconstructions recorded in the New Zealand ACL Registry between April 2014-November 2019 were analyzed. The primary outcome was return to weekly sport, defined as a Marx activity score of 8, at 2-year follow-up. The secondary outcome was return to preinjury activity level, defined as a post-operative Marx activity score that was equal or greater to the patient's preinjury Marx score. Return to sport was compared between the BTB and hamstring tendon autografts via multivariate binary logistic regression with adjustment for patient demographics. 4259 patients were analyzed, of which 50.3% were playing weekly sport (n = 2144) and 28.4% had returned to their preinjury activity level (n = 1211) at 2-year follow-up. A higher rate of return to weekly sport was observed with the BTB autograft compared to the hamstring tendon autograft (58.7% versus 47.9%, adjusted odds ratio = 1.23, p = 0.009). Furthermore, the BTB autograft had a higher rate of return to preinjury activity levels (31.5% versus 27.5%, adjusted odds ratio = 1.21, p = 0.025). The BTB autograft is associated with a higher return to sport and may explain the higher rate of contralateral
Abstract. Background. Anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injuries with coinciding posterolateral tibial plateau (PLTP) depression fractures are rare. According to the most up to date literature, addressing the PLTP is crucial in preventing failure of the ACL. However, the surgical management of these injuries pose a great challenge to orthopaedic surgeons, given the anatomical location of the depressed PTP fragment. We report a case of a 17-year-old patient presenting to our department with this injury and describe a novel fixation method, that has not been described in the literature. Surgical Technique. A standard 2-portal arthroscopy is used to visualise the fractures. The PLTP is addressed first. With the combined use of arthroscopy and fluoroscopy, a guide pin is triangulated from the anteromedial aspect of the tibia, towards the depressed plateau fragment. Once the guide pin is approximately 1cm from the centre of the fragment, it is over-drilled with a cannulated drill, and simultaneously bluntly punched up to its original anatomical location. Bone graft is then used to fill the void, supported by two subchondral screws. Both fluoroscopy and arthroscopy are used to confirm adequacy of fixation. Finally, the tibial spine avulsion fracture is repaired arthroscopically using the standard suture bridging technique. Conclusion. We describe a novel, one-stage, minimally invasive approach that addresses both the
Abstract. Ramp lesions are meniscocapsular or meniscosynovial tears associated with chronic
Abstract. Background. The gold standard treatment for
Traditionally, sports Injuries have been sub-optimally managed through Emergency Departments (ED) in the public health system due to a lack of adequate referral processes. Fractures are ruled out through plain radiographs followed by a reactive process involving patient initiated further follow up and investigation. Consequently, significant soft tissue and chondral injuries can go undiagnosed during periods in which early intervention can significantly affect natural progression. The purpose of this quality improvement project was to assess the efficacy of an innovative Sports Injury Pathway introduced to detect and treat significant soft tissue injuries. A Sports Injury Pathway was introduced at Fiona Stanley Hospital (WA, Australia) in April 2019 as a collaboration between the ED, Physiotherapy and Orthopaedic Departments. ED practitioners were advised to have a low threshold for referral, especially in the presence of a history of a twisting knee injury, shoulder dislocation or any suggestion of a hip tendon injury. All referrals were triaged by the Perth Sports Surgery Fellow with early follow-up in our Sports Trauma Clinics with additional investigations if required. A detailed database of all referrals was maintained, and relevant data was extracted for analysis over the first 3 years of this pathway. 570 patients were included in the final analysis. 54% of injuries occurred while playing sport, with AFL injuries constituting the most common contact-sports injury (13%). Advanced Scope Physiotherapists were the largest source of referrals (60%). A total of 460 MRI scans were eventually ordered comprising 81% of total referrals. Regarding Knee MRIs, 86% identified a significant structural injury with
Meniscal tears commonly co-occur with ACL tears, and many studies address their side, pattern, and distribution. Few studies assess the patient's short-term functional outcome concerning tear radial and circumferential distribution based on the Cooper et al. classification. Meniscal tears require primary adequate treatment to restore knee function. Our hypothesis is to preserve the meniscal rim as much as possible to maintain the load-bearing capacity of the menisci after meniscectomy. The purpose of this study is to document the location and type of meniscal tears that accompany anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) tears and their effect on patient functional outcomes following arthroscopic ACL reconstruction and meniscectomy. This prospective cross-sectional observational study was conducted at AL-BASRA Teaching Hospital in Iraq between July 2018 and January 2020 among patients with combined ipsilateral
Previous studies have identified the anterolateral complex (ALC) as having an important role in controlling anterolateral rotatory laxity following
Abstract. Background. The gold standard treatment for
BACKGROUND. Injuries of the both menisci and complete ACL tear is quite common. In the literature, functional outcome in these patients is often variable and less than satisfactory. We studied the functional outcome of this group of patients (retrospective study of prospectively followed case series). MATERIAL AND METHODS. All patients who were diagnosed with
Introduction. This biomechanics investigation evaluated commercially available studded and bladed football boots to determine whether boot type influences potential non-contact