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Background: A treatment algorithm and screening examination have been developed to guide patient management and prospectively determine potential for highly active individuals to succeed with nonoperative care after anterior cruciate ligament rupture.

Objective: To prospectively characterize and classify the entire population of highly active individuals over a 10-year period and provide final outcomes for individuals who elected nonoperative care.

Methods: Inclusion criteria included presentation within 7 months of the index injury and an International Knee Documentation Committee level I or II activity level before injury. Concomitant injury, unresolved impairments, and a screening examination were used as criteria to guide management and classify individuals as noncopers (poor potential) or potential copers (good potential) for nonoperative care.

Results: A total of 832 highly active patients with subacute anterior cruciate ligament tears were seen over the 10-year period; 315 had concomitant injuries, 87 had unresolved impairments, and 85 did not participate in the classification algorithm. The remaining 345 patients (216 men, 129 women) participated in the screening examination a mean of 6 weeks after the index injury. There were 199 subjects classified as noncopers and 146 as potential copers. Sixty-three of 88 potential copers successfully returned to preinjury activities without surgery, with 25 of these patients not undergoing anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction at the time of follow-up.

Conclusion: The classification algorithm is an effective tool for prospectively identifying individuals early after anterior cruciate ligament injury who want to pursue nonoperative care or must delay surgical intervention and have good potential to do so.



NAVIGATION


         

 

Background: Knee hyperextension and tibial posterior slope are related to sagittal alignment of the knee. The relationship of sagittal alignment to noncontact anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injuries has been reported with conflicting results.

Purpose: To determine whether there is a difference in sagittal alignment of the knee between an ACL-deficient group and a negative control group and to find risk factors contributing to noncontact ACL injuries.

Study Design: Cross-sectional study; Level of evidence, 3.

Methods: Magnetic resonance images of the knee in full extension were acquired in the patient group, which consisted of 33 male and 40 female patients with noncontact ACL injuries, and in the negative control group, which consisted of 28 male and 30 female participants. Three angles were measured: the angle between the femoral axis and the tibial axis, designated as the extension angle; the femoral plateau angle, between the femoral axis and a line tangent to the concave profile of the medial tibial plateau (P line); and the tibial posterior slope angle, 90° minus the angle made by the intersection of the tibial axis and the P line.

Results: In the female group, the femoral plateau angle and the tibial posterior slope angle were significantly larger in the ACL-deficient patients than in the negative control group, although these differences were not seen in the male group. In the female subjects, a negative correlation between the extension angle and the tibial posterior slope angle was seen in the ACL-deficient group, suggesting that knees with hyperextension had a small tibial posterior slope, whereas knees without hyperextension had a large tibial posterior slope.

Conclusion: There were 2 types of large femoral plateau angles: one had its origin in an increasing tibial posterior slope; the other resulted from hyperextension of the knee. Large posterior tibial slope and hyperextension are both correlated with noncontact ACL injury in women.




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