Abstract

BackgroundAt present, the most effective and mature treatment after ACL injury and tear is ACL reconstruction, but the rehabilitation process after ACL reconstruction that is very long, so it is very important to find early MRI positive findings of knee instability.MethodsWe retrospectively collected the clinical and imaging data of 70 patients who underwent ACL reconstruction from January 2016 to December 2019; Based on clinical criteria, the patients were divided into a stable group (n = 57) and an unstable group (n = 13); We measured the MRI imaging evaluation indexes, including the position of the bone tunnel, graft status, and the anatomical factors; Statistical methods were used to compare the differences of imaging evaluation indexes between the two groups; The prediction equation was constructed and ROC curve was used to compare the prediction efficiency of independent prediction factors and prediction equation.ResultsThere were significant differences in the abnormal position of tibial tunnel entrance, percentage of the position of tibial tunnel entrance, position of tibial tunnel exit, lateral tibial posterior slope (LTPS), width of intercondylar notch between stable knee joint group and unstable knee joint group after ACL reconstruction (P < 0.05); The position of tibial tunnel exits and the lateral tibial posterior slope (LTPS) and the sagittal obliquity of the graft were independent predictors among surgical factors and self-anatomical factors (P < 0.05); The prediction equation of postoperative knee stability was established: Logit(P) = -1.067–0.231*position of tibial tunnel exit + 0.509*lateral tibial posterior slope (LTPS)-2.105*sagittal obliquity of the graft; The prediction equation predicted that the AUC of knee instability was 0.915, the sensitivity was 84.6%, and the specificity was 91.2%.ConclusionsWe found that abnormalities of the position of the exit of the bone tunnel, lateral tibial posterior slope (LTPS) and sagittal obliquity of the graft were the early MRI positive findings of knee instability after ACL reconstruction. It is helpful for clinicians to predict the stability of knee joint after ACL reconstruction.

Highlights

  • Anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) and posterior cruciate ligament (PCL) are important static structures that maintain the stability of the knee joint

  • The prediction equation predicted that the AUC of knee instability was 0.915, the sensitivity was 84.6%, Table 3 Positive MRI findings after ACL reconstruction to evaluate the stability of knee joint after operation

  • This study found that the early positive findings of knee instability after anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction using magnetic resonance includes three factors: the position of tibial tunnel exit, the lateral tibial posterior slope (LTPS) and the sagittal obliquity of the graft

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Summary

Introduction

Anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) and posterior cruciate ligament (PCL) are important static structures that maintain the stability of the knee joint. Their roles are to connect the femur and tibia, to maintain the stability of the knee joint and to limit the forward movement of the tibia when performing movements that need to change direction. The most effective and mature treatment for ACL tears is ACL reconstruction. The most effective and mature treatment after ACL injury and tear is ACL reconstruction, but the rehabilitation process after ACL reconstruction that is very long, so it is very important to find early MRI positive findings of knee instability

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