PURPOSE: The purpose of this prospective study was to evaluate how early the bone plug was integrated into the rectangular femoral tunnel after anatomical ACL reconstruction using a bone-patellar tendon-bone (BTB) graft via a rectangular tunnel (RT BTB ACL-R). METHODS: Twenty consecutive patients who had undergone the reconstruction procedure were evaluated by CT scans at 4 and 8 weeks postoperatively. In each scan, 30 slices for multiplanar reconstruction were collected parallel to the long axis of the parallelepiped femoral tunnel and perpendicular to the tendinous plane of the bone plug. Each slice was classified as "complete," indicating no visible gap between the plug and the tunnel wall or trabecular continuity or "incomplete," showing a visible gap. Bone plug-tunnel integration was evaluated as "excellent," "good," "fair," or "poor" for >20, 11-20, 5-10, and <4 "complete" slices, respectively. RESULTS: In this evaluation, 55% of the patients were rated as "excellent" on the first scan, and 80% were "excellent" on the second scan, showing healing over time. The CT values at the anterior interface between the bone plug and the tunnel wall were also measured on both scans. The mean changes in CT value at 8 weeks were significantly lower than those at 4 weeks. CONCLUSION: This study shows that bone plug-femoral tunnel integration was almost complete by 8 weeks after surgery using RT BTB ACL-R.
PURPOSE: The purpose of this prospective study was to evaluate how early the bone plug was integrated into the rectangular femoral tunnel after anatomical ACL reconstruction using a bone-patellar tendon-bone (BTB) graft via a rectangular tunnel (RT BTB ACL-R). METHODS: Twenty consecutive patients who had undergone the reconstruction procedure were evaluated by CT scans at 4 and 8 weeks postoperatively. In each scan, 30 slices for multiplanar reconstruction were collected parallel to the long axis of the parallelepiped femoral tunnel and perpendicular to the tendinous plane of the bone plug. Each slice was classified as "complete," indicating no visible gap between the plug and the tunnel wall or trabecular continuity or "incomplete," showing a visible gap. Bone plug-tunnel integration was evaluated as "excellent," "good," "fair," or "poor" for >20, 11-20, 5-10, and <4 "complete" slices, respectively. RESULTS: In this evaluation, 55% of the patients were rated as "excellent" on the first scan, and 80% were "excellent" on the second scan, showing healing over time. The CT values at the anterior interface between the bone plug and the tunnel wall were also measured on both scans. The mean changes in CT value at 8 weeks were significantly lower than those at 4 weeks. CONCLUSION: This study shows that bone plug-femoral tunnel integration was almost complete by 8 weeks after surgery using RT BTB ACL-R.
Authors: K L Markolf; D M Burchfield; M M Shapiro; B R Davis; G A Finerman; J L Slauterbeck Journal: J Bone Joint Surg Am Date: 1996-11 Impact factor: 5.284
Authors: W G Clancy; R G Narechania; T D Rosenberg; J G Gmeiner; D D Wisnefske; T A Lange Journal: J Bone Joint Surg Am Date: 1981-10 Impact factor: 5.284
Authors: Yasutaka Tashiro; Vani Sundaram; Eric Thorhauer; Tom Gale; William Anderst; James J Irrgang; Freddie H Fu; Scott Tashman Journal: Arthroscopy Date: 2017-03-24 Impact factor: 4.772
Authors: Ralph Akoto; Jonas Müller-Hübenthal; Maurice Balke; Malte Albers; Bertil Bouillon; Philip Helm; Marc Banerjee; Jürgen Höher Journal: BMC Musculoskelet Disord Date: 2015-08-19 Impact factor: 2.362