| Literature DB >> 22802989 |
Johannes Struewer1, Turgay Efe, Thomas Manfred Frangen, Tim Schwarting, Benjamin Buecking, Steffen Ruchholtz, Karl Friedrich Schüttler, Ewgeni Ziring.
Abstract
The aim of the present study was to evaluate incidence, degree and impact of tibial tunnel widening (TW) on patient-reported long-term clinical outcome, knee joint stability and prevalence of osteoarthritis (OA) after isolated anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction. On average, 13.5 years after ACL reconstruction via patella-bone-tendon-bone autograft, 73 patients have been re-evaluated. Inclusion criteria consisted of an isolated anterior cruciate ligament rupture and reconstruction, a minimum of 10-year follow-up and no previous anterior cruciate ligament repair or associated intra-articular lesions. Clinical evaluation was performed via the International Knee Documentation Committee (IKDC) score and the Tegner and Lysholm scores. Instrumental anterior laxity testing was carried out with the KT-1000™ arthrometer. The degree of degenerative changes and the prevalence of osteoarthritis were assessed with the Kellgren-Lawrence score. Tibial tunnel enlargement was radiographically evaluated on both antero-posterior and lateral views under establishment of 4 degrees of tibial tunnel widening by measuring the actual tunnel diameters in mm on the sclerotic margins of the inserted tunnels on 3 different points (T1-T3). Afterwards, a conversion of the absolute values in mm into a 4 staged ratio, based on the comparison to the results of the initial drill-width, should provide a better quantification and statistical analysis. Evaluation was performed postoperatively as well as on 2 year follow-up and 13 years after ACL reconstruction. Minimum follow-up was 10 years. 75% of patients were graded A or B according to IKDC score. The mean Lysholm score was 90.2±4.8 (25-100). Radiological assessment on long-term follow-up showed in 45% a grade I, in 24% a grade II, in 17% a grade III and in additional 12% a grade IV enlargement of the tibial tunnel. No evident progression of TW was found in comparison to the 2 year results. Radiological evaluation revealed degenerative changes in sense of a grade II OA in 54% of patients. Prevalence of a grade III or grade IV OA was found in 20%. Correlation analysis showed no significant relationship between the amount of tibial tunnel enlargement (P>0.05), long-term clinical results, anterior joint laxity or prevalence of osteoarthritis. Tunnel widening remains a radiological phenomenon which is most commonly observed within the short to midterm intervals after anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction and subsequently stabilises on mid and long- term follow-up. It does not adversely affect long-term clinical outcome and stability. Furthermore, tunnel widening doesn't constitute an increasing prevalence of osteoarthritis.Entities:
Keywords: IKDC-score; anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction; long-term anterior laxity.; long-term follow-up; osteoarthritis; tibial tunnel widening
Year: 2012 PMID: 22802989 PMCID: PMC3395990 DOI: 10.4081/or.2012.e21
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orthop Rev (Pavia) ISSN: 2035-8164
Figure 1Calculation of the tibial tunnel enlargement.
Evaluation of clinical results according to the International Knee Documentation Committee (IKDC) score and evaluation of anterior laxity via the KT-1000 arthrometer according to the IKDC score.
| 2 years/midterm | 13.5 years/longterm | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| IKDC A | 64.3% (N=81) | 58.9% (N=43) | |
| Clin. Results according to the IKDC score | IKDC B | 30.2% (N=38) | 31.5% (N=23) |
| IKDC C | 5.5% (N=7) | 8.2% (N=6) | |
| IKDC D | 0% (N=0) | 1.4% (N=1) | |
| IKDC A | 37.3% (N=47) | 23.3% (N=17) | |
| Ant. Laxity according to the IKDC score | IKDC B | 47.6% (N=60) | 47.9% (N=35) |
| IKDC C | 14.3% (N=18) | 23.3% (N=17) | |
| IKDC D | 0.8% (N=1) | 5.5% (N=4) |
IKDC, International Knee Documentation Committee.
Knee function and activity level according to the Lysholm scoring scale and the Tegener activity scale, respectively throughout the entire study period. The results are given as mean values and range.
| Before injury | 2 years | 13,5 years | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Knee function: lysholm scoring scale | 95.7 (65–100) | 92.4 (35–100) | 90.2 (25–100) |
| Activity level: tegener activity score | 5.8 (2–10) | 5.4 (2–10) | 4.9 (1–10) |
Figure 2Prevalence of osteoarthritis according to the Kellgren Lawrence score.
Figure 3Prevalence of tibial tunnel widening.
Evaluation of tunnel shapes at 2 years and 13.5 years.
| 2 years/midterm follow up | 13.5 years/long-term follow up | |
|---|---|---|
| Line | 84.9% (N=107) | 86.4% (N=63) |
| Cavitory | 10.3% (N=13) | 10.9% (N=8) |
| Cone | 4.8% (N=6) | 2.7% (N=2) |