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Good stability and mid-term subjective outcomes after repeated anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) revision surgery using allografts.

Authors :
Grassi, Alberto
Cialdella, Sergio
Costa, Gianluca
Pizza, Nicola
Macchiarola, Luca
Dal Fabbro, Giacomo
Lo Presti, Mirco
Zaffagnini, Stefano
Source :
Knee Surgery, Sports Traumatology, Arthroscopy. Aug2023, Vol. 31 Issue 8, p3353-3361. 9p. 4 Charts, 1 Graph.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Purpose: To evaluate the mid-term clinical outcomes of a cohort of patients who underwent multiple ACL revision reconstructions. The hypothesis was that patients with pre-existing meniscal deficiency conditions, malalignment and cartilage degeneration would have obtained lower results. Methods: All cases of multiple ACL revisions performed with allograft tissue at one single sport-medicine institution were extracted and patients with a minimum 2 years of follow-up were included. WOMAC, Lhysolm, IKDC, and Tegner activity level before the injury and at last follow-up was collected and laxity evaluated with KT-1000 arthrometer and KiRA triaxial accelerometer. Results: From a cohort of 241 ACL revisions, 28 patients (12%) with Repeated ACL Revision reconstructions were included. Fourteen cases (50%) were considered "Complex" due to the addition of meniscal allograft transplantation (8) or meniscal scaffold (3) or high tibial osteotomy (3). The remaining 14 cases (50%) were considered as "Isolate". The mean WOMAC score was 84.6 ± 11.4, Lysholm 81.7 ± 12.3, subjective IKDC 77.2 ± 12.1, and median Tegner score 6 (IQR 5–6) at pre-injury and at final follow-up. Statistically significant inferior values of WOMAC (p = 0.008), Lysholm (p = 0.02) and Subjective IKDC (p = 0.0193) were detected between "Complex" and "Isolate" revision groups. Higher average values of anterior translation at KT-1000 at both 125 N (p = 0.03) and manual maximum displacement test (p = 0.03) were reported in "Complex" with respect to "Isolate" revisions. Four patients were considered as failures and occurred in patients with "Complex" revisions, none occurred in the "Isolate" (30% vs 0%; p = 0.04). Conclusion: Good mid-term clinical results can be obtained after repeated ACL revision with allograft in patients who experienced multiple failures; however, those who need additional procedure due to malalignment or post-meniscectomy syndrome reported lower objective and subjective results. Level of evidence: III. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09422056
Volume :
31
Issue :
8
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Knee Surgery, Sports Traumatology, Arthroscopy
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
165045719
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00167-023-07399-8