Abstract

Tibial tubercle avulsion fracture with simultaneous patellar tendon avulsion is a rare injury that has only ever been reported in adolescents; the diagnosis and management of this combined lesion has not been described in the adult population. A healthy 62-year-old male presented with acute knee pain and an inability to walk after a fall on ice. Radiographs demonstrated a displaced fracture of the tibial tubercle; patellar tendon integrity could not be verified by ultrasonography. Intraoperatively, the patient was found to have a distal avulsion of the patellar tendon in addition to tubercle fracture. First, the tendon was secured to the tubercle fragment with transosseous sutures. A novel slotted-plate construct was used to fix the tubercle fragment prior to tightening the sutures. Postoperatively, the patient was permitted to bear weight as tolerated with the operative knee immobilized in extension. After six weeks, knee range of motion was gradually increased using a hinged brace. At one year, the patient had achieved excellent range of motion (full extension to 135 degrees of flexion) and strength (5/5 knee flexion and extension) without residual pain or complications. This case represents the first description of diagnosis, management, and rehabilitation of a combined tibial tubercle fracture with distal patellar tendon avulsion in an adult. The unique construct, a slotted-plate over transosseous sutures, provided excellent results and likely has further applications.

Highlights

  • Acute tibial tubercle avulsion fracture is an uncommon injury, typically seen only in adolescents due to the vulnerability of an open physis [1]

  • A combined lesion⁠ - tubercle fracture with patellar tendon avulsion from the tubercle fragment - has only ever been reported in adolescents, typically those involved in sport, and can present challenges in both diagnosis and management [4,5,6,7,8,9]

  • This is the first reported case of tibial tubercle fracture with simultaneous avulsion of the distal patellar tendon in an adult

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Summary

Introduction

Acute tibial tubercle avulsion fracture is an uncommon injury, typically seen only in adolescents due to the vulnerability of an open physis [1]. In adults, this injury is exceedingly rare, with only several reported cases. A combined lesion⁠ - tubercle fracture with patellar tendon avulsion from the tubercle fragment - has only ever been reported in adolescents, typically those involved in sport, and can present challenges in both diagnosis and management [4,5,6,7,8,9] This is the first reported case of tibial tubercle fracture with simultaneous avulsion of the distal patellar tendon in an adult. The aim of this report is to describe the diagnosis, operative management, and postoperative rehabilitation of a combined tibial tubercle fracture with distal patellar tendon avulsion in an adult

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