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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_14 | Pages 10 - 10
23 Jul 2024
Al-hasani F Mhadi M
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Meniscal tears commonly co-occur with ACL tears, and many studies address their side, pattern, and distribution. Few studies assess the patient's short-term functional outcome concerning tear radial and circumferential distribution based on the Cooper et al. classification. Meniscal tears require primary adequate treatment to restore knee function. Our hypothesis is to preserve the meniscal rim as much as possible to maintain the load-bearing capacity of the menisci after meniscectomy. The purpose of this study is to document the location and type of meniscal tears that accompany anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) tears and their effect on patient functional outcomes following arthroscopic ACL reconstruction and meniscectomy. This prospective cross-sectional observational study was conducted at AL-BASRA Teaching Hospital in Iraq between July 2018 and January 2020 among patients with combined ipsilateral ACL injury and meniscal tears. A total of 28 active young male patients, aged 18 to 42 years, were included. All patients were subjected to our questionnaire, full history, systemic and regional examination, laboratory investigations, imaging studies, preoperative rehabilitation, and were followed by Lysholm score 6 months postoperatively. All 28 patients were males, with a mean age of 27 ± 0.14 years. The right knee was the most commonly affected in 20/28 patients (71.4%). The medial meniscus was most commonly injured in 11 patients, 7 patients had lateral meniscal tears, and 10 patients had tears in both menisci. The most common tear pattern of the medial meniscus was a bucket handle tear (36.4%), while longitudinal tears were the most frequent in the lateral meniscus (71.4%) (P-value = 0.04). The most common radial tear location was zone E-F (5/28, 17.8%), and the most common circumferential zone affected was the middle and inner third, reported in 50% of tears. Good and excellent outcomes using the Lysholm score after 6 months were obtained in 42.9% and 17.9% of patients, respectively. Better functional scores were associated with lateral meniscal tears, bucket handle tears, tears extending to a more peripheral vascular area, and if no more than one-third of the meniscus was resected (P-value = 0.002). Less favourable outcomes were reported in smokers, posterior horn tears, and when surgery was delayed more than 1 year (P-value = 0.03). We conclude that there is a negative correlation between the amount of meniscus resected and functional outcome. Delayed ACL reconstruction increases the risk of bimeniscal tears. Bucket handle tears are the most common tears, mostly in the medial meniscus, while longitudinal tears are most common in the lateral meniscus. We recommend performing early ACL reconstruction within 12 months to reduce the risk of bimeniscal injuries


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 101-B, Issue SUPP_5 | Pages 2 - 2
1 Apr 2019
Chappell K Van Der Straeten C McRobbie D Gedroyc W Brujic D Meeson R
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Introduction. Cruciate retaining knee replacements are only implanted into patients with “healthy” ligaments. However, partial anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) tears are difficult to diagnose with conventional MRI. Variations of signal intensity within the ligament are suggestive of injury but it is not possible to confirm damage or assess the collagen alignment within the ligaments. The potential use of Magic Angle Directional Imaging (MADI) as a collagen contrast mechanism is not new, but has remained a challenge. In theory, ligament tearing or joint degeneration would decrease tissue anisotropy and reduce the magic angle effect. Spontaneous cruciate ligament rupture is relatively common in dogs. This study presents results from ten canine knees. Methods. Ethical approval was obtained to collect knees from euthanized dogs requiring a postmortem (PM). A Siemens Verio 3T MRI scanner was used to scan a sphere containing the canine knees in 9 directions to the main magnetic field (B. 0. ) with an isotropic 3D-T1-FLASH sequence. After imaging, the knees were dissected and photographed. The images were registered and aligned to compare signal intensity variations. Segmentation using a thresholding technique identified voxels containing collagen. For each collagen-rich voxel the orientation vector was computed using Szeverenyi and Bydder's method. Each orientation vector reflects the net effect of all fibers comprised within a voxel. The assembly of all unit vectors represents the fiber orientation map and was visualised in ParaView using streamlines. The Alignment Index (AI) is defined as a ratio of the fraction of orientations within 20° (solid angle) centred in that direction to the same fraction in a random (flat) case. By computing AI for a regular gridded orientation space we can visualise differences in AI on a hemisphere. AI was normalised so that AI=0 indicates isotropic collagen alignment. Increasing AI values indicate increasingly aligned structures: AI=1 indicates that all collagen fibers are orientated within the cone of 20° centred at the selected direction. Results. Dogs cranial cruciate ligament (CCL) is similar to human ACL. It's composed of an anteromedial (AM) bundle and a posterolateral (PL) bundle. Two knees were damaged with partial CCL tears, the PL bundle was intact but the AM bundle was torn. Paraview streamlines of the CCL for healthy and damaged knees differ. The healthy knee has continuous fiber tracts with no ligament disruption. In the AM bundle fibers are discontinuous and the PL bundle fibers are continuous as expected in a partially torn CCL. The AI for healthy (mean AI=0.25) and damaged CCL (mean AI= 0.075) is significantly different (p<0.01). The damaged AM bundle has a more diffuse spread of less aligned fibers compared to the more concentrated and aligned PL fiber bundle. Conclusion. This study demonstrates the first visualisation of a CCL partial tear using MADI. Combined with AI, our scanning technique offers a tool to visualise and quantify changes in collagen fiber orientation. Thus, MRI can be used to improve the diagnosis and quantification of partial ligament tears in the knee