| Literature DB >> 35004026 |
Kevin Rodriguez1, Mridul Soni2, Pranay K Joshi3, Saawan C Patel4, Devarashetty Shreya5, Diana I Zamora6, Gautami S Patel7, Idan Grossmann8, Ibrahim Sange9.
Abstract
The most frequent type of ligament injury is an anterior cruciate ligament (ACL). The mechanisms of an ACL injury are classified as direct contact, indirect contact, and non-contact. Physical examination for the assessment of the ACL is commonly used in routine care in the evaluation of the knee and is part of the diagnostic process. Due to the high degree of variability in their presentation and outcomes, treatment must be tailored according to factors such as patient demographics, the severity of the damage, and long-term improvement profile. When it comes to ACL injuries, low-quality data have been produced that reveals no difference in patient-reported knee function results between surgical ACL restoration and conservative therapy. However, these results must be evaluated in the perspective of the fact that many individuals with an ACL rupture remained symptomatic after rehabilitation and eventually underwent ACL reconstruction surgery. This article has reviewed the risk factors and the mechanisms that commonly lead to ACL injuries. This article has also discussed the clinical significance of conservative and surgical management and has highlighted the implications of both approaches.Entities:
Keywords: acl injury; acl instability; acl tear; anterior cruciate ligament (acl) injuries; anterior cruciate ligament (acl) reconstruction; conservative and surgical treatment; ortho surgery; orthopedic sports medicine
Year: 2021 PMID: 35004026 PMCID: PMC8730351 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.20206
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Anterior cruciate ligament conservative treatment
ACL: anterior cruciate ligament
| References | Design | No of the cases studied | Study Parameters | Diagnostic Criteria | Conclusion |
| Park et al. [ | Cohort prognostic study | 85 | Initial three months treatment with one-year follow-up | MRI clinical evaluation (Lysholm score, Tegner activity score, Lachman test, pivot-shit test). | In the acute period of ACL damage, non-operative therapy using a brace looks to be an effective and practical approach for reaching a satisfactory clinical result. Non-operative treatment should begin within two weeks following an ACL injury to obtain better outcomes in the remodeling process and healing of the damaged location. |
| Ahn et al. [ | Cohort prognostic study | 48 | Initial treatment with a two-year follow-up | MRI clinical evaluation (Lachman test, pivot-shit test, Lysholm score, International Knee Documentation Committee score). | These data show that nonsurgical therapy may assist a subgroup of individuals with acute ACL damage. A considerable improvement was noted when comparing clinal evaluations done during the two-year follow-up to those performed during the first evaluation. |
| Grindem et al. [ | Cohort prognostic study | 43 | Initial treatment for six weeks and a two-year follow-up | MRI clinical evaluation (Isokinetic knee extension and flexion strength, and Sports participation). | This study revealed that patients who used a nonsurgical strategy were considerably more likely to participate in level-II and level-III sports over the first year of follow-up. Knee problems occurred after two years. |
| Kostogiannis et al. [ | Cohort prognostic study | 100 | Initial treatment with a continuous follow-up lasting 15 years | MRI arthroscopy clinical evaluation (Lysholm score, Tegner activity level, and global knee function). | Sixty-seven percent of the participants in the study did not get ACL restoration. At the three-year follow-up, 60% had the same or higher activity level as before the injury, whereas 31% had a lower level of activity. |
| Frobell et al. [ | Randomized controlled trial | 121 | Initial treatment with a two-year follow-up | MRI clinical evaluation (ACL insufficiency, Tegner score 5-9). | In 61% of cases, patients can avoid ACL reconstruction by choosing a well-structured rehabilitation program. |
Anterior cruciate ligament surgical treatment
ACL: anterior cruciate ligament, IKDC: International Knee Documentation Committee, WOMAC: Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index, SANE: single assessment numerical evaluation, ACLR: anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction, PT: patellar tendon, HT: Hamstring tendon
| References | Design | No. of the cases studied | Study parameters | Diagnostic criteria | Conclusion |
| Laxdal et al. [ | Case series | 948 | Surgery at a median of 12 months (range: 0.5–360 months) after their injury | MRI clinical evaluation (Tegner score, Lysholm score, anterior side-to-side laxity difference, one-leg hop test) | The International Knee Documentation Committee rating method categorized 69.3% of the patients in this research as usual or nearly normal. The knee-walking test, on the other hand, was ineffective or problematic for 36% of patients. A longer time range between the index injury and reconstruction and concurrent joint deterioration revealed was related to worse outcomes during the index procedure. |
| van Dijck et al. [ | Case series | 196 | Surgery with a median follow-up of 32 months | MRI one-incision endoscopic approach with patellar-tendon graft clinical evaluation (detailed history, functional knee ligament testing, KT-1000 arthrometer testing, one-leg-hop testing, Lysholm score, Tegner score, and the IKDC evaluation) | According to the findings of this study, 27.6% of patients required a re-intervention throughout the 83 months following surgery. A second intervention was needed due to meniscal lesions, cyclops lesions, donor site morbidity, re-rupture of the ACL, posterior cruciate ligament rupture, and a medial collateral ligament lesion. |
| Pogorzelski et al. [ | Cohort study | 41 | 12 months out from arthroscopic treatment categorized into two groups | MRI clinical evaluation (IKDC evaluation, WOMAC score, Lysholm score) | When compared to patients who underwent initial graft resection, patients with graft retention had better postoperative outcomes. Graft re-implantation should be performed after ACLR to avoid future cartilage and meniscal lesions. |
| Drogset et al. [ | Case control | 100 | Surgery with an average of eight-year follow-up after surgery | MRI clinical evaluation (Lysholm score, Lachman scores, KT-1000 arthrometer measurements) Kennedy ligament augmentation device | A contralateral ACL rupture was recorded in 3–24% of surgically treated individuals, depending on the length of the follow-up. The high proportion of patients in their research who had a future ACL injury, graft rupture, or contralateral ACL rupture may be more significant than in the general population. |
| Gobbi et al. [ | Cohort study | 100 | Surgery (PT or HT) with follow-up at 3, 6, 12, and 24 months | MRI clinical evaluation (IKDC, Lysholm, Noyes, and Tegner score, Marx scale and SANE) | The study showed that 65% of patients returned to the same level of sports performance on average, with only 70% of patients experiencing a drop in Tegner activity level from initial evaluation to subsequent follow-ups. |