Anterior cruciate ligament injury: Evaluation of intraarticular reconstruction of acute tears without repair

Abstract
To evaluate the effectiveness of our treatment regimen, we retrospectively studied the surgically treated knees of 155 athletes, aged 15 to 42 years, who had sustained acute ACL tears. All were treated with ligament excision and intraarticular bone-patellar tendon-bone recon struction followed by early motion with emphasis on full extension. The follow-up period ranged from 2 to 7 years. Of the 155 patients, 140 were available for final followup at a minimum of 2 years after reconstruction. The patients were evaluated by objective measures (KT-1000, Cybex, Lachman test, range of motion, and postoperative competition level) and subjective assess ment scores (pain, swelling, stability, activity level, walk ing, stair climbing, running, jumping, or twisting). The subjective scores were tabulated for stability level, total score, and activity level. After the patients achieved full range of motion, the KT-1000 measurements at a 20 pound force revealed an average difference of 1.3 mm between the injured and noninjured knees. All but 3 of the 140 patients had a firm endpoint on the Lachman test, and the Cybex tests showed a mean hamstring strength of 98% and mean quadriceps strength of 90%. Sixty of the 69 varsity athletes who were eligible to play returned to preinjury competition level the following season. One had reconstruction failure and eight chose not to con tinue competition for academic reasons. The question naire score average was 92.7 (maximum, 100 points, normal athletic knee score 93.5). We concluded that the surgical procedure, with em phasis on early full extension postoperatively, achieved excellent results and provided a stable knee.

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