Knee Surgery, Sports Traumatology, Arthroscopy | 2021

Suture tape augmentation improves laxity of MCL repair in the ACL reconstructed knee

 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Medial collateral ligament (MCL) injury is very common and surgical repair is sometimes necessary. Especially in the setting of simultaneous anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (ACLR) as the ACL is the secondary restraint against valgus stress. The goal of this study was to evaluate knee biomechanics after suture repair of the MCL augmented with suture tape, as compared to MCL repair alone, in the setting of concomitant ACL reconstruction (ACLR). Fifteen fresh-frozen human cadaveric knees were tested using a six-degrees-of-freedom robotic system under four loadings: (a) an 89.0 N anterior tibial load, (b) a 5.0 Nm internal and external rotation torque, (c) a 10.0 Nm valgus load, (d) a 7.0 Nm valgus load combined with 5.0 Nm internal rotation torque as a static simulated pivot-shift. The tested conditions were ACLR with the following states: (1) MCL intact, (2) MCL deficient, (3) MCL Repair, and (4) MCL repair augmented with suture tape (MCL Repair\u2009+\u2009ST). Under the different knee loadings, the tibial displacement, and the force in either the intact MCL, suture repaired MCL or repaired MCL-suture tape complex was measured. While neither the MCL Repair nor the MCL Repair\u2009+\u2009ST restored valgus rotation to the MCL intact state, displacement was significantly smaller after MCL Repair\u2009+\u2009ST (p\u2009<\u20090.05). The knee rotation under external rotation torque in MCL Repair\u2009+\u2009ST did not differ MCL intact (n.s.), while with MCL Repair the rotation was significantly greater (p\u2009<\u20090.05). MCL Repair\u2009+\u2009ST did not cause an over-constraint of the knee in any of the tested loading conditions. In a combined ACL-reconstruction-MCL-repair model, MCL Repair augmented with suture tape improved valgus and external rotation laxity when compared to MCL suture repair alone. Suture tape augmentation may provide this additional means of stabilization and can be added at the time of surgical repair of the MCL. Clinically this may result in lower failure rates and less residual laxity after MCL repair, as well as shorter immobilization times and faster return to play.

Volume 29
Pages 2545 - 2552
DOI 10.1007/s00167-020-06386-7
Language English
Journal Knee Surgery, Sports Traumatology, Arthroscopy

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