Don O’Donoghue (1950) described a particular acute injury of the knee in athletes (“also of high school age”) that he described as “an unhappy triad”. It consisted of: 1) rupture of the Medial Collateral Ligament (MCL), 2) damage to the Medial Meniscus (MM) and 3) rupture of the Anterior Cruciate Ligament (ACL) We have reviewed the arthroscopic findings of 34 consecutive knees (ages 12 to 16 years) with complete rupture of the ACL. In 21 cases the injury was acute, and the remaining were chronic of had had more than one traumatic episode at the time of arthroscopy. Out of the 34 cases, 26 had associated meniscal injuries: 4 MM; 14 Lateral Meniscus (LM) and 8 MM plus LM. Acute ACL injuries were associated mainly with LM damage (MM/LM: 1/5) whereas, in the chronic injuries, there were no such differences (MM/LM: 1/1). Out of the 21 acute LCA injuries there were 17 cases of acute rupture of the MCL.
See if permanent damage of the growth plate after physeal distraction is the rule and Identify factors with influence on the viability of the physis after physeal distraction.
We looked with interest at the 13 cases younger than 10 y.o. since the repercussions of iatrogenic physeal damage would obviously be bigger in this age group. Five out of the 13 showed premature closure and in the remnant eight an open growth plate was observed at follow-up. All patients with open and/or functioning physes after distraction had no local injuries in the growth plate prior to distraction (4 congenital short femora and 4 normal physes). On the contrary, four out of the five cases with prematurely closed physes, had a local physeal damage prior to distraction (3 bony bridges and one non-union), and the remnant was a congenitally short femur. Growth after distraction was difficult to assess in the congenitally short femora but it has been very satisfactory in the 4 cases of previously normal physes (2 benign tumours and 2 femoral shortenings due to hip disorders). In three cases of congenital short femur in pre-teenagers we were able to repeat distraction twice through the same physis, since it had remained open after the first distraction.
Nine patients (the longest defects) were treated by conventional Bone Transport whereas other compression-distraction techniques were used in the remaining. Monolateral frames were used in all cases. All but one of the post-traumatic cases had additional injuries and in four occasions one of the joints adjacent to the defect was involved.
The most frequent complication was pin tract infection (37%), one case needing change of pins. Fracture at the pin site was seen in two cases. Functional results were closely related to: a. The healing of the defect and b. The existence of injuries to the joints adjacent to the defect. With a minimum follow-up of 18 months there were 2 poor functional results due to an avascular necrosis of the dome of the talus (talus neck fracture).