Abstract

BackgroundThe effects of repair of isolated anterior horn meniscus lesions have not been thoroughly described in the literature. We aimed to evaluate outcomes with subjective clinical scores and imaging modalities after repair of isolated anterior horn tears, at 24 months’ follow-up.MethodsRecords of all patients that opted for surgical repair of isolated, anterior horn tears of the medial and lateral meniscus were retrospectively reviewed, between 2016 and 2018. All patients were treated with arthroscopic outside-in technique by the same surgeon. Preoperative and postoperative clinical files were accessed to recover records of preoperative symptomatology, patient-reported scores [International Knee Documentation Committee (IKDC) rating, Lysholm score and Tegner activity level], preoperative and postoperative MRI data and time from injury to surgery.ResultsMean age of eight patients was 25.25 years (range 18-37 years). Diagnostic preoperative MRI revealed isolated anterior horn tear of the lateral meniscus and medial meniscus in five patients and an isolated anterior horn tear of the medial meniscus in three patients. Mean time from injury to surgical repair was 23.75 days (range 7-43). We considered seven out of eight repairs to be successfully healed. At 24 months’ follow-up: Mean Lysholm score was 92.25 (range 89-95), Tegner activity scale score was 6.5 (range 5-8) and IKDC score was 91.78 (range 87.8-94.4). All scores significantly improved compared to preoperative values (p<0.001).ConclusionsOutside-in is a reliable technique to repair meniscal anterior horn tears, both medially and laterally, with high healing rates and patient satisfaction in young, active patients.

Highlights

  • The recommended and validated classification of meniscal injury consists of three circumferential and three radial zones [1,2,3,4]

  • Records of all patients that opted for surgical repair of isolated, anterior horn tears of the medial and lateral meniscus were retrospectively reviewed, between 2016 and 2018

  • 15% of athletes with acute knee trauma and hemarthrosis are prone to isolated meniscus tears, and a higher ratio of medial (69%-76%) to lateral (24-31%) meniscus tears has been observed [5,6]

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Summary

Introduction

The recommended and validated classification of meniscal injury consists of three circumferential (assessing vascularity) and three radial zones (determining anteroposterior location) [1,2,3,4]. Medial and lateral anterior horn meniscal injuries, outcomes and recommendations are seldom reported as a separate entity in literature. 15% of athletes with acute knee trauma and hemarthrosis are prone to isolated meniscus tears, and a higher ratio of medial (69%-76%) to lateral (24-31%) meniscus tears has been observed [5,6]. Isolated anterior horn tear is a rare entity, comprising of 1.6-3.5% of all meniscus injury [4,5,7,8] or 8% as a concomitant knee injury [9]. The effects of repair of isolated anterior horn meniscus lesions have not been thoroughly described in the literature. We aimed to evaluate outcomes with subjective clinical scores and imaging modalities after repair of isolated anterior horn tears, at 24 months’ follow-up

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