Anatomical reconstruction of posterolateral corner and combined injuries of the knee

Purpose The goal of this study was to present a 2- to 5-year prospective follow-up of an anatomical posterolateral corner reconstruction in a series of 16 patients with symptomatic instability and pain complaints of the knee. Methods All 16 patients underwent a posterolateral corner reconstruction a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Knee surgery, sports traumatology, arthroscopy : official journal of the ESSKA sports traumatology, arthroscopy : official journal of the ESSKA, 2016-01, Vol.24 (1), p.221-228
Hauptverfasser: van der Wal, W. A., Heesterbeek, P. J. C., van Tienen, T. G., Busch, V. J., van Ochten, J. H. M., Wymenga, A. B.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Purpose The goal of this study was to present a 2- to 5-year prospective follow-up of an anatomical posterolateral corner reconstruction in a series of 16 patients with symptomatic instability and pain complaints of the knee. Methods All 16 patients underwent a posterolateral corner reconstruction as described by LaPrade et al. If cruciate ligament ruptures were present and had not been addressed earlier, these were reconstructed as well. Preoperatively and 2–5 years after surgery, multiple subjective knee outcome scores (VAS satisfaction score, Tegner, Lysholm, Noyes score and IKDC subjective knee form) were obtained, and the laxity of the joint was evaluated objectively by using bilateral varus stress radiographs to compare the injured with the uninjured knee. Results Eleven patients had concomitant ACL or PCL surgery or already had undergone surgery on this cruciate ligament. Mean varus laxity of the injured knee on varus stress radiographs improved significantly from 9.6° (6.6–17.1) to 6.3° (0.3–13.4), p  = 0.0011. Post-operative varus laxity did not return to the level of the uninjured knee: 4.4° (1.5–7.7), p  = 0.036. VAS satisfaction score, the Tegner, Lysholm, Noyes scores and the IKDC subjective knee form all improved significantly. Conclusion The anatomical reconstruction of the posterolateral corner does provide restoration of the external rotation stability in the majority of patients. However, the varus laxity could not be restored in all patients. Functional knee scores improved significantly, and most reconstructed knees had a laxity of
ISSN:0942-2056
1433-7347
DOI:10.1007/s00167-014-3369-7