Magnussen Robert A, Reinke Emily K, Huston Laura J, Hewett Timothy E, Spindler Kurt P
Department of Orthopaedics, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, USA
OSU Sports Medicine, Sports Health and Performance Institute, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, USA.
Am J Sports Med. 2016 Dec;44(12):3077-3082. doi: 10.1177/0363546516656835. Epub 2016 Aug 1.
Knee laxity in the setting of suspected anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury is frequently assessed through physical examination using the Lachman, pivot-shift, and anterior drawer tests. The degree of laxity noted on these examinations may influence treatment decisions and prognosis.
Increased preoperative knee laxity would be associated with increased risk of subsequent revision ACL reconstruction and worse patient-reported outcomes 2 years postoperatively.
Cohort study; Level of evidence, 2.
From an ongoing prospective cohort study, 2333 patients who underwent primary isolated ACL reconstruction without collateral or posterior cruciate ligament injury were identified. Patients reported by the operating surgeons as having an International Knee Documentation Committee (IKDC) grade D for Lachman, anterior drawer, or pivot-shift examination were classified as having high-grade laxity. Multiple logistic regression modeling was used to evaluate whether having high-grade preoperative laxity was associated with increased odds of undergoing revision ACL reconstruction within 2 years of the index procedure, controlling for patient age, sex, Marx activity level, level of competition, and graft type. Multiple linear regression modeling was used to evaluate whether having high-grade preoperative laxity was associated with worse IKDC score or Knee injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score Knee-Related Quality of Life subscale (KOOS-QOL) scores at a minimum 2 years postoperatively, controlling for baseline score, patient age, ethnicity, sex, body mass index, marital status, smoking status, sport participation, competition level, Marx activity rating score, graft type, and articular cartilage and meniscus status.
Pre-reconstruction laxity data were available for 2325 patients (99.7%). Two-year revision data were available for 2259 patients (96.8%), and patient-reported outcomes were available for 1979 patients (84.8%). High-grade preoperative laxity was noted in 743 patients (31.9%). The mean postoperative IKDC score was 81.8 ± 15.9, and the mean KOOS-QOL score was 72.0 ± 22.0. The presence of high-grade pre-reconstruction laxity was associated with significantly increased odds of ACL graft revision (odds ratio [OR] = 1.87 [95% CI, 1.19-2.95]; P = .007). The presence of high-grade pre-reconstruction laxity was not associated with any difference in postoperative IKDC (β = -0.56, P = .44) or KOOS-QOL (β = 0.04, P = .97).
The presence of high-grade pre-reconstruction knee laxity as assessed by manual physical examination under anesthesia is associated with significantly increased odds of revision ACL surgery but has no association with patient-reported outcome scores at 2 years after ACL reconstruction.
在疑似前交叉韧带(ACL)损伤的情况下,膝关节松弛度常通过体格检查中的拉赫曼试验、轴移试验和前抽屉试验来评估。这些检查中所记录的松弛程度可能会影响治疗决策和预后。
术前膝关节松弛度增加与后续ACL翻修重建风险增加以及术后2年患者报告的预后较差相关。
队列研究;证据等级,2级。
从一项正在进行的前瞻性队列研究中,确定了2333例接受初次单纯ACL重建且无侧副韧带或后交叉韧带损伤的患者。手术医生报告在拉赫曼试验、前抽屉试验或轴移试验中国际膝关节文献委员会(IKDC)评分为D级的患者被归类为高度松弛。使用多元逻辑回归模型评估术前高度松弛是否与初次手术2年内进行ACL翻修重建的几率增加相关,同时控制患者年龄、性别、马克思活动水平、竞争水平和移植物类型。使用多元线性回归模型评估术前高度松弛是否与术后至少2年时较差的IKDC评分或膝关节损伤和骨关节炎转归评分膝关节相关生活质量子量表(KOOS-QOL)评分相关,同时控制基线评分、患者年龄、种族、性别、体重指数、婚姻状况、吸烟状况、运动参与情况、竞争水平、马克思活动评分、移植物类型以及关节软骨和半月板状况。
2325例患者(99.7%)有重建前松弛度数据。2259例患者(96.8%)有2年翻修数据,1979例患者(84.8%)有患者报告的预后数据。743例患者(31.9%)术前高度松弛。术后IKDC评分均值为81.8±15.9,KOOS-QOL评分均值为72.0±22.0。重建前高度松弛与ACL移植物翻修几率显著增加相关(比值比[OR]=1.87[95%CI,1.19 - 2.95];P = 0.007)。重建前高度松弛与术后IKDC评分(β = -0.56,P = 0.44)或KOOS-QOL评分(β = 0.04,P = 0.97)的任何差异均无关。
麻醉下体格检查评估出的重建前膝关节高度松弛与ACL手术翻修几率显著增加相关,但与ACL重建术后2年患者报告的预后评分无关。