Abstract

The etiology and pathology of mucoid degeneration of the anterior cruciate ligament (MD-ACL) remain poorly understood. MD-ACL may be associated with knee osteoarthritis (OA) or a mechanism other than OA. This study evaluated the radiological differences between knees with MD-ACL and those with a normal ACL and compared the clinical and radiological features of knees with MD-ACL according to the knee OA status. This retrospective study compared the radiological features of the intercondylar notch width index (NWI) and posterior tibial slope (PTS) of 67 MD-ACL patients (MD group) and 67 age-, sex-, and OA grade-matched patients with a normal ACL (control group). During the subgroup analysis, MD-ACL patients were divided into the non-OA subgroup (n = 41) and OA subgroup (n = 26). The pain location and characteristics of the knee, PTS, and NWI were compared between these subgroups. Compared to the control group, the MD group had a lower NWI (0.26 ± 0.03 vs. 0.28 ± 0.01, p < 0.001) and a larger PTS (11.3° ± 3.0° vs. 9.2° ± 2.5°, p < 0.001). During the subgroup analysis, the most common pain locations were the posterior and medial aspects of the knee in the non-OA subgroup (43.9%) and OA subgroup (53.8%), respectively. Pain on terminal flexion was the most common pain characteristic in both subgroups (non-OA subgroup, 73.1%; OA subgroup, 53.8%). The PTS was not different between subgroups (11.7° ± 3.2° in the non-OA subgroup vs. 10.6° ± 2.7° in the OA subgroup; p = 0.159). However, the non-OA subgroup had a lower NWI than the OA subgroup (0.25 ± 0.03 vs. 0.28 ± 0.02, p = 0.001). Patients with MD-ACL had a lower NWI and a larger PTS than patients with a normal ACL. Furthermore, the clinical and radiological features of MD-ACL differed according to the knee OA status. A narrow intercondylar notch may be more closely associated with the development of MD-ACL without OA.

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