Knee Surgery, Sports Traumatology, Arthroscopy | 2019

Stress radiography at 30° of knee flexion is a reliable evaluation tool for high-grade rotatory laxity in complete ACL-injured knees

 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Purpose To evaluate the diagnostic value of stress radiography and determine the cutoff values for high-grade anterolateral rotatory laxity in complete anterior cruciate ligament (ACL)-deficient knees at different positions. Methods Forty-two patients with complete ACL rupture (group 1) and 37 normal subjects (group 2) were prospectively enrolled. The amount of anterior translation in the medial (MM) and lateral (LL) distance compartments and the difference between them (LL-MM distance) were measured using stress radiography at 30°, 45°, 60°, and 90° positions. The area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) was assessed for the presence of a high-grade (grade\u2009>\u20092) pivot shift. Results The MM and LL distances in group 1 were significantly different at 30° and 45° positions ( P \u2009<\u20090.05). The AUC of the MM (AUC, 0.903) and LL (AUC, 0.901) distances at the 30° position was significantly higher than that of the other positions ( P \u2009=\u20090.000); however, the cutoff values were different to diagnose ACL injury (MM vs. LL, 3.1\xa0mm vs. 5.4\xa0mm). A 2.1-mm cutoff for the LL-MM distance showed 78.4% sensitivity and 90.3% specificity for detecting the presence of a high-grade pivot shift (AUC\u2009=\u20090.905, P \u2009=\u20090.000). Conclusion The cutoff values of stress radiography differed according to anatomical references and knee flexion positions. Stress radiography of a 2.1\xa0mm difference in LL-MM distance at 30° of knee flexion can be a reliable method for high-grade rotatory laxity in complete ACL-injured knees. Level of evidence Level 1, diagnostic study.

Volume 28
Pages 2233-2244
DOI 10.1007/s00167-019-05803-w
Language English
Journal Knee Surgery, Sports Traumatology, Arthroscopy

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