| Literature DB >> 29978445 |
Alexander S North1, Tracey Wilkinson2.
Abstract
Injuries to the acromioclavicular (AC) joint are common, tending to occur secondary to traumatic injuries. Rockwood grade IV, V and VI injuries involve complete dislocation of the joint and require surgical reconstruction, with inconclusive literature on whether grade III injuries should be surgically or conservatively managed. There are over one hundred reported surgical techniques which reconstruct the AC joint, with little indication of which methods achieve the best results. Techniques can generally be considered as: anatomical reduction; CC ligament reconstruction; and anatomical reconstruction. Techniques which implant hardware to reduce the AC joint, such as the hook plate, are commonly implemented, but have been shown to alter the mechanics of the joint significantly, resulting in poor short-term and long-term outcomes. Methods which reconstruct both the acromioclavicular and coracoclavicular ligaments are comparatively new, and early reports suggest that they achieve biomechanical properties similar to the native joint. More focus should be placed on such techniques in the future to determine whether they offer a more suitable approach to improve patient outcomes following AC joint reconstruction.Entities:
Keywords: Acromioclavicular; Anatomical; Biomechanics; Hook plate; Reconstruction; Rockwood
Year: 2018 PMID: 29978445 PMCID: PMC6042224 DOI: 10.1007/s11751-018-0314-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Strategies Trauma Limb Reconstr ISSN: 1828-8928
Summary of biomechanical testing of CC ligament reconstructions in cadaveric specimens
| Study | Specimens | Mean age | Reconstruction technique | Directions assessed | Testing protocol |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Costic et al. [ | 9 | 51.0 years | Anatomical CC ligament reconstruction with semitendinosus graft | Unconfirmed | 100 cycles of loads fluctuating between 20 and 60 N, 1-h rest. Further 100 cycles of loads fluctuating between 20 and 90 N, then load-failure test |
| Deshmukh et al. [ | 21 | 64.7 years | Five non-anatomical CC reconstructions using different synthetic materials tested in 4 specimens each (one in 5) | Anterior, posterior and superior | 1000 cycles of superior loading between 10 and 100 N, displacement of 1st and 1000th cycle recorded, then load-failure test |
| Mazzocca et al. [ | 42 | 72.8 years | Anatomical 2-bundle CC ligament (14 specimens) | Anterior, posterior and superior | 10 cycles of 25 N, displacement in all three directions at 70 N, 3000 cycles of superior loading at 70 N, displacement testing in all three directions at 70 N, load-failure test |
Comparison of the advantages and disadvantages of the three approaches in reconstructing the acromioclavicular joint: anatomical reduction; coracoclavicular ligament reconstruction; and anatomical reconstruction
| Reconstruction approach | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|
| Anatomical reduction | Stability in vertical plane and to axial rotation equivalent to native complex [ | Results in significantly less stability in horizontal plane [ |
| Coracoclavicular ligament reconstruction | Vertical stability equivalent to native complex [ | Results in significantly less stability in horizontal plane [ |
| Anatomical reconstruction | Achieves overall biomechanical results most comparable to native complex [ | Techniques described thus far require further optimisation |