Gage Andrew, Kluczynski Melissa A, Bisson Leslie J, Marzo John M
Department of Orthopaedics, Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Science, SUNY University at Buffalo, Buffalo, New York, USA.
Orthop J Sports Med. 2019 Mar 8;7(3):2325967119829547. doi: 10.1177/2325967119829547. eCollection 2019 Mar.
Arthrofibrosis commonly occurs after an acute anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury and following ACL reconstruction and can lead to poor outcomes. Preoperative stiffness has been shown to be associated with postoperative stiffness; however, few studies have examined predictors of preoperative delay in obtaining full knee extension.
To examine demographic and injury factors as predictors of time required to achieve full knee extension preoperatively in patients with an acute ACL injury.
Case-control study; Level of evidence, 3.
A total of 172 patients with an acute ACL tear at presentation (defined as ≤3 weeks from injury) who underwent magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) within 6 weeks of the injury were included in this analysis. Preoperative data included date of injury, age at injury, sex, body mass index, mechanism of injury (noncontact/contact), time from injury to surgery (days), time to achieve full extension prior to surgery (weeks), and bone bruising on MRI. Time to achieve full extension was categorized as <3 or ≥3 weeks. Unadjusted and adjusted logistic regression was used to examine predictors of delayed time to achieve full extension (≥3 vs <3 weeks). Odds ratios and 95% CIs were reported.
Time to achieve full extension was early (<3 weeks) in 98 patients and delayed (≥3 weeks) in 74 patients. The average time to achieve full extension was 7 days in the early group and 32.5 days in the delayed group. Delayed time to achieve full extension was associated with increased lateral femoral condyle (LFC) bruising compared with early time to achieve extension (82.8% vs 66.7%, respectively; = .03). No other statistically significant predictors were found after adjustment for age, sex, body mass index, and mechanism of injury.
Acute ACL injuries associated with LFC bone bruising seen on MRI are more likely to result in reduced extension prior to ACL reconstruction. These injuries should be identified and addressed by an appropriate preoperative rehabilitation program, and surgery should be delayed to avoid risking arthrofibrosis postoperatively by reconstructing a knee with less than full extension.
关节纤维化常见于急性前交叉韧带(ACL)损伤后以及ACL重建术后,可导致不良预后。术前僵硬已被证明与术后僵硬有关;然而,很少有研究探讨术前获得全膝关节伸直延迟的预测因素。
研究人口统计学和损伤因素作为急性ACL损伤患者术前实现全膝关节伸直所需时间的预测因素。
病例对照研究;证据等级,3级。
本分析纳入了172例初次就诊时急性ACL撕裂(定义为受伤后≤3周)且在受伤后6周内接受磁共振成像(MRI)检查的患者。术前数据包括受伤日期、受伤时年龄、性别、体重指数、损伤机制(非接触性/接触性)、受伤至手术时间(天)、术前实现全伸直时间(周)以及MRI上的骨挫伤。实现全伸直的时间分为<3周或≥3周。采用未调整和调整后的逻辑回归分析来研究延迟实现全伸直(≥3周与<3周)的预测因素。报告比值比和95%可信区间。
98例患者实现全伸直的时间较早(<3周),74例患者延迟(≥3周)。早期组实现全伸直的平均时间为7天,延迟组为32.5天。与早期实现伸直相比,延迟实现全伸直与外侧股骨髁(LFC)挫伤增加有关(分别为82.8%和66.7%;P = 0.03)。在对年龄、性别、体重指数和损伤机制进行调整后,未发现其他具有统计学意义的预测因素。
MRI上显示与LFC骨挫伤相关的急性ACL损伤更有可能导致ACL重建术前伸直受限。这些损伤应通过适当的术前康复计划进行识别和处理,并且应延迟手术,以避免通过重建未完全伸直的膝关节而增加术后关节纤维化的风险。