Quadrupled bone-semitendinosus ACL reconstruction: a prospective clinical investigation in 100 patients
Tóm tắt
The hypothesis of our study was that a quadrupled
bonesemitendinosus tendon graft could combine the advantage of
bone-tobone healing with the high cross-sectional area of a
quadrupled hamstring graft in ACL reconstruction. ACL
reconstruction with a semitendinosus tendon graft was performed
on 100 patients with isolated ACL injury from January 1996 to
December 1999: femoral fixation was obtained with Endobutton and
tibial fixation with Fastlok. Patients were evaluated for
standard knee scores and functional strength tests,
postoperative pain rating, knee radiographs taken after surgery
and at final follow-up, magnetic resonance images at 3 and 6
months, isokinetic flexion-extension and internal-external
rotation tests at 3, 6, and 12 months. Computerized laxity
analysis was performed at final evaluation. Average surgical
time was 85 minutes, including 13 minutes for graft preparation;
90% of the patients were discharged within 24 h. Subjective knee
rating was 80%; kneeling test was positive in 7% and Werner
score was 44 (range, 30–48). Lachman test was negative in 90% at
final evaluation (mean follow-up, 38 months). Sensory changes at
the anterior part of the proximal tibia were present in 30% at 3
months and 10% had definite hyposthesia. MRI showed graft
incorporation at 3 months. Computerized laxity analysis revealed
90% with less than 3-mm side-to-side differences. Isokinetic
testing showed normal hamstring and quadriceps peak torques at
12 months. The functional strength tests were normal by 6
months. Average Noyes score was 87.9, Lysholm score 93, and
Tegner activity rating 6.0 (pre-injury, 6.1). IKDC score showed
90 normal or nearly normal knees, 9 abnormal, and one severely
abnormal knee. Quadrupled bone-semitendinosus is a viable graft
for ACL reconstruction and should be considered, especially in
patients with pre-existing extensor mechanism problems.