| Literature DB >> 16721538 |
K Donald Shelbourne1, Christine Klotz.
Abstract
Anterior cruciate ligament surgery and rehabilitation have changed drastically during the past 30 years. The patellar tendon autograft fixed with buttons provides tight bone-to-bone placement of the graft and quick bony healing, which allows accelerated rehabilitation to obtain full range of motion and strength. Although surgical stability is easily reproducible, long-term patient satisfaction is difficult to guarantee. Full knee range of motion should be compared to that of the contralateral normal knee, including full hyperextension. We followed the progress of all patients to gauge the utility of our rehabilitation program. In order of importance, the lack of normal knee range of motion (within 2 degrees extension and 5 degrees of flexion compared with that of the normal knee), partial or total medial meniscectomy, partial or total lateral meniscectomy, and articular cartilage damage were related to lower subjective scores. Rehabilitation after ACL reconstruction must first strive to achieve full symmetrical knee range of motion before aggressive strengthening can begin. Our current perioperative rehabilitation starts at the time of injury and preoperatively includes aggressive swelling reduction, hyperextension exercises, gait training, and mental preparation. Goals after surgery are to control swelling while regaining full knee range of motion. After quadriceps strengthening goals are reached, patients can shift to sport-specific exercises. When using a graft from the contralateral knee, the conflicting goals of strengthening the donor site and achieving full knee range of motion are divided between the knees. Thus, normal range of motion and strength can be achieved more easily and more quickly than when using an ipsilateral graft. Regardless of the graft source, a systematic rehabilitation program that emphasizes the return to symmetrical knee motion, including hyperextension, is necessary to achieve the optimum result.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2006 PMID: 16721538 PMCID: PMC2778715 DOI: 10.1007/s00776-006-1007-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Orthop Sci ISSN: 0949-2658 Impact factor: 1.601
Fig. 1The senior author now performs about 250 anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstructions per year. The only other surgeries performed are knee arthroscopies and patellar realignments (about 300 per year)
Fig. 2Objective stability has been consistently obtained. Values shown are the manual maximum differences between knees as measured with the KT-1000 arthrometer
International Knee Documentation Committee criteria for the evaluation of range of motion in the reconstructed knee compared with that of the opposite knee
| IKDC rating | Extension | Flexion |
|---|---|---|
| Normal | ≤2° | ≤5° |
| Near normal | 3°–5° | 6°–15° |
| Abnormal | 6°–10° | 16°–25° |
| Severely abnormal | >10° | >25° |
IKDC, International Knee Documentation Committee
Fig. 3Subjective results of the 10- to 20-year study show the importance of obtaining full, symmetrical range of motion. The best long-term subjective scores were seen for patients who had normal knee extension
Fig. 4Cascade of events outlines a systematic rehabilitation program that emphasizes the return to symmetrical knee motion that includes hyperextension. ROM, range of motion
Fig. 5Towel stretch for knee extension. The towel is used to lift the heel of the affected lower extremity to end-range hyperextension by pulling the end of the towel upward toward the shoulder
Fig. 6Achieving full symmetrical flexion means the patient should be able to kneel and sit back on heels comfortably
Fig. 7Cryo/Cuff provides both compression and cold therapy to reduce swelling. This modality used in combination with elevation in the continuous passive motion machine can effectively reduce any intraarticular effusion or hemarthrosis
Fig. 8The Elite Seat device allows the patient to recline completely, which relaxes the hamstrings. The patient uses a pulley control to increase the mechanical force for knee extension
Perioperative rehabilitation phases
| Phase | Goals | Specific exercises |
|---|---|---|
| Preoperative | Attaining normal physiology and motion | Heel props, towel stretches, prone hangs; gait and stance training; heel slides, flexion hangs, wall slides |
| Immediately postoperative phase: through first week | Full extension, 115° of flexion; limited effusion; unassisted leg lifts and ambulation with normal gait | CPM flexion, heel slides, straight leg raises, heel props, towel cold/compression device continually |
| Intermediate phase: weeks 2–4 | Full extension, 120° of flexion, limitedeffusion; unassisted leg lifts and ambulation with normal gait | Heel props, towel stretches, Elite Seat, correct stance and walking, heel slides, wall slides, flexion hangs; step box — low level; cold/compression device |
| Advanced strengthening phase | Full motion and symmetrical strength in both knees | Progressing from above to step box at higher level, leg press, straight-line running; StairMaster, elliptical trainer, progression to sports specific exercise; cold/compression as needed; knee motion monitored daily: adjust strengthening and activities to ensure full motion is maintained |
| Return to competition | Symmetrical; normal knees; full competition | Sports-specific exercise, functional progression, return to competition |
CPM, continuous passive movement