Abstract

The objective of this study was to develop a method for obtaining a controllable and reproducible immediate postoperative mechanical state in a knee with an anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction. This method, called the force-setting technique, was demonstrated using a composite graft consisting of the middle third of the patellar tendon with bone blocks (PT) and the ligament augmentation device (LAD). The total graft force was set to match the force in the intact ACL at 30 degrees flexion with the knee under the same standardized external load, while at the same time the load sharing between the biologic and augmentation components was controlled. The total graft force was set to match the ACL force three separate times in each knee, with ratios of load sharing set at the following levels: 50% PT-50% LAD, 25% PT-75% LAD, and 75% PT-25% LAD. ACL, PT, LAD, and collateral forces were measured using buckle transducers, and three-dimensional knee motion was measured using an instrumented spatial linkage as 90 N anteriorly directed tibial loads were applied to eight specimens at 0 degree, 30 degrees, 60 degrees, and 90 degrees flexion with an intact ACL, an excised ACL, and the three load-sharing reconstruction states. The total graft force could be consistently set to within an average of 2% of the intact ACL force at 30 degrees flexion, and load sharing between the graft segments could be set to within an average of 5.1% of the desired ratio at 30 degrees.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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