Andrew T. Pennock, Rady Children's Hospital and Health Center, 3030 Children's Way, Suite 410, San Diego, CA 92123.
Am J Sports Med. 2013 Dec;41(12):2779-83. doi: 10.1177/0363546513504286. Epub 2013 Sep 26.
Meniscus tear patterns in the pediatric population have not been well described.
To delineate the pattern of meniscus tears and the likelihood of repair at the time of surgery in both children and adolescents.
Cross-sectional study; Level of evidence, 3.
A retrospective review was performed on all patients between the ages of 10 and 19 years who underwent arthroscopic surgery for a meniscus injury at a single institution. Patients with open growth plates were classified as children, while those with closed growth plates were classified as adolescents. Demographic data were documented, including age, sex, body mass index (BMI), mechanism of injury, and time from injury to surgery. Operative reports and intraoperative photographs were used to assess the tear pattern (type, location, zone) as well as all concomitant procedures and injuries. Tears were classified as discoid, vertical, bucket-handle, radial, oblique, horizontal, fray, root detachment, or complex.
Of the 293 patients reviewed, 197 (67%) had lateral meniscus tears, 65 (22%) had medial meniscus tears, and 31 (11%) had tears to both menisci. The cohort was separated into 119 (41%) children (mean age, 13.5 years) and 174 (59%) adolescents (mean age, 16.4 years). Children were more likely to have discoid meniscus tears, lower BMI, and meniscus injuries not associated with ligamentous injuries (P < .05). The rate of associated ligament injuries in children was 28% compared with 51% in adolescents. Overall, the most frequent tear pattern was complex (28%), followed by vertical (16%), discoid (14%), bucket-handle (14%), radial (10%), horizontal (8%), oblique (5%), fray (3%), and root detachment (2%). Complex tears were associated with boys (32% vs 20% in girls; P < .03) and greater mean BMI (27.4 vs 25.1 kg/m(2) in those with noncomplex tears; P < .002), even when taking sex into account. Surgical repair was performed in 47% of all cases (56% in those treated within 3 months of injury vs 42% in those treated after 6 months; P < .03), and there was no difference in the repair rate between the two age groups (49% in children vs 46% in adolescents; P > .05).
Adolescents and children sustain more complex meniscus injuries that are often less repairable than previously reported in the literature. Factors that are associated with greater tear complexity include male sex and obesity. Our findings also suggest that the earlier treatment of meniscus tears may increase the likelihood of repair in younger patients.
儿童人群中的半月板撕裂模式尚未得到很好的描述。
描述儿童和青少年半月板撕裂的模式以及手术时修复的可能性。
横断面研究;证据水平,3 级。
对在一家机构接受关节镜半月板损伤手术的 10 至 19 岁患者进行了回顾性研究。骺板未闭合的患者被归类为青少年,骺板已闭合的患者被归类为儿童。记录了人口统计学数据,包括年龄、性别、体重指数(BMI)、损伤机制和损伤至手术的时间。使用手术报告和术中照片评估撕裂模式(类型、位置、区带)以及所有伴随的手术和损伤。撕裂被分类为盘状、垂直、桶柄状、放射状、斜形、水平、磨损、根撕脱或复杂。
在 293 例患者中,197 例(67%)为外侧半月板撕裂,65 例(22%)为内侧半月板撕裂,31 例(11%)为双侧半月板撕裂。该队列分为 119 例(41%)儿童(平均年龄 13.5 岁)和 174 例(59%)青少年(平均年龄 16.4 岁)。儿童更可能出现盘状半月板撕裂、较低的 BMI 以及与韧带损伤无关的半月板损伤(P<.05)。儿童的合并韧带损伤发生率为 28%,而青少年为 51%。总体而言,最常见的撕裂模式为复杂型(28%),其次为垂直型(16%)、盘状型(14%)、桶柄状型(14%)、放射状型(10%)、水平型(8%)、斜形型(5%)、磨损型(3%)和根撕脱型(2%)。复杂撕裂与男性(男孩 32%,女孩 20%;P<.03)和较高的平均 BMI(复杂撕裂组 27.4 kg/m2,非复杂撕裂组 25.1 kg/m2;P<.002)有关,即使考虑到性别因素也是如此。所有病例中均进行了手术修复(47%)(伤后 3 个月内治疗的患者为 56%,伤后 6 个月以上治疗的患者为 42%;P<.03),两组的修复率无差异(儿童 49%,青少年 46%;P>.05)。
与文献报道相比,青少年和儿童发生的半月板撕裂更为复杂,且往往更难以修复。与撕裂复杂性增加相关的因素包括男性和肥胖。我们的研究结果还表明,半月板撕裂的早期治疗可能会增加年轻患者修复的可能性。