Kiapour Ata M, Kiapour Ali, Goel Vijay K, Quatman Carmen E, Wordeman Samuel C, Hewett Timothy E, Demetropoulos Constantine K
Sports Medicine Research Laboratory, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Boston Children's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, United States; Engineering Center for Orthopaedic Research Excellence (ECORE), Departments of Orthopaedics and Bioengineering, University of Toledo, Toledo, OH, United States.
Engineering Center for Orthopaedic Research Excellence (ECORE), Departments of Orthopaedics and Bioengineering, University of Toledo, Toledo, OH, United States.
J Biomech. 2015 Jul 16;48(10):1745-51. doi: 10.1016/j.jbiomech.2015.05.017. Epub 2015 May 29.
Despite general agreement on the effects of knee valgus and internal tibial rotation on anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) loading, compelling debate persists on the interrelationship between these rotations and how they contribute to the multi-planar ACL injury mechanism. This study investigates coupling between knee valgus and internal tibial rotation and their effects on ACL strain as a quantifiable measure of injury risk. Nineteen instrumented cadaveric legs were imaged and tested under a range of knee valgus and internal tibial torques. Posterior tibial slope and the medial tibial depth, along with changes in tibiofemoral kinematics and ACL strain, were quantified. Valgus torque significantly increased knee valgus rotation and ACL strain (p<0.020), yet generated minimal coupled internal tibial rotation (p=0.537). Applied internal tibial torque significantly increased internal tibial rotation and ACL strain and generated significant coupled knee valgus rotation (p<0.001 for all comparisons). Similar knee valgus rotations (7.3° vs 7.4°) and ACL strain levels (4.4% vs 4.9%) were observed under 50 Nm of valgus and 20 Nm of internal tibial torques, respectively. Coupled knee valgus rotation under 20 Nm of internal tibial torque was significantly correlated with internal tibial rotation, lateral and medial tibial slopes, and medial tibial depth (R(2)>0.30; p<0.020). These findings demonstrate uni-directional coupling between knee valgus and internal tibial rotation in a cadaveric model. Although both knee valgus and internal tibial torques contribute to increased ACL strain, knee valgus rotation has the ultimate impact on ACL strain regardless of loading mode.
尽管对于膝外翻和胫骨内旋对前交叉韧带(ACL)负荷的影响已达成普遍共识,但关于这些旋转之间的相互关系以及它们如何导致多平面ACL损伤机制仍存在激烈争论。本研究调查了膝外翻和胫骨内旋之间的耦合及其对ACL应变的影响,将其作为损伤风险的可量化指标。对19条装有仪器的尸体下肢在一系列膝外翻和胫骨内扭矩作用下进行成像和测试。量化了胫骨后倾角和胫骨内侧深度,以及胫股关节运动学和ACL应变的变化。外翻扭矩显著增加了膝外翻旋转和ACL应变(p<0.020),但产生的耦合胫骨内旋最小(p=0.537)。施加的胫骨内扭矩显著增加了胫骨内旋和ACL应变,并产生了显著的耦合膝外翻旋转(所有比较的p<0.001)。分别在50 Nm的外翻扭矩和20 Nm的胫骨内扭矩作用下,观察到相似的膝外翻旋转(7.3°对7.4°)和ACL应变水平(4.4%对4.9%)。在20 Nm的胫骨内扭矩作用下,耦合的膝外翻旋转与胫骨内旋、胫骨内外侧斜率和胫骨内侧深度显著相关(R(2)>0.30;p<0.020)。这些发现表明在尸体模型中膝外翻和胫骨内旋之间存在单向耦合。尽管膝外翻和胫骨内扭矩都导致ACL应变增加,但无论加载模式如何,膝外翻旋转对ACL应变具有最终影响。