Abstract
Previous Anterior Cruciate Ligament (ACL) reconstruction is currently a bar from entry to the Royal Marines and Royal Navy, whilst the British Army allows recruits to join if asymptomatic 18 months post ACL reconstruction. However current Royal Marines policy is to rehabilitate recruits who sustain an ACL disruption in training. We retrospectively analysed the rehabilitation times and pass out rate of Royal Marines who had an ACL disruption during recruit training over an 8 year period.
12 recruits sustained an ACL disruption during recruit training in the study period, giving an incidence of around 1.5/1000 recruits. 9 Patients underwent ACL repairs in training, with 1 patient leaving and rejoining post repair and later successfully passed out. 2 patients were treated conservatively. Of the 12 ACL sustained in training 8/12 (67%) passed out. None of the patients treated conservatively passed out. The mean time out of training for successful recruits was 51.6 weeks (95% CI 13.1) mean rehabilitation time post ACL reconstruction for successful recruits was 36.7 weeks (95% CI 12.5). Mean time to discharge for unsuccessful recruits 63.2 weeks (95% CI 42.4). In the operative group 1/10 left due to failure to return to training and 1/10 left through unrelated reasons. Current costing for recruit training is £1800 per week per recruit.
ACL injuries are not common in Royal Marine Training, and reconstruction is not a bar to completing Royal Marine basic training. We estimate that it costs around £100,000 per-injured recruit, to maintain a policy of rehabilitating ACL injured recruits in Royal Marines training. Further research into the long-term employability or Royal Marines sustaining an ACL injury in training is required.