Abstract
Introduction Purely chondral injuries of the knee are relatively rare, and no consensus exists on the appropriate treatment in such cases. We describe two adolescent patients with chondral injury of the knee who were successfully treated by osteochondral peg fixation. Patients, Concerns, and Clinical Findings. In case 1, a 14-year-old boy presented with complaints of right knee pain after landing on his leg while playing basketball. Radiography and computerized tomography revealed no abnormalities. However, magnetic resonance imaging revealed a chondral defect in his lateral femoral condyle and a loose chondral fragment measuring 6.5 cm2. In case 2, a 12-year-old boy presented with complaints of left knee pain after a rotational injury while playing baseball. Similar to case 1, magnetic resonance imaging revealed a chondral defect in his lateral femoral condyle and a loose chondral fragment measuring 3.0 cm2. Primary Diagnosis, Interventions, and Outcomes. The two patients were treated by surgical fixation using osteochondral pegs, which were harvested from the femoral condyle. After a year, postoperative computerized tomography and magnetic resonance imaging showed union of the chondral fragment with the osteochondral pegs and surrounding tissue. In both cases, the Lysholm score was 100 points at the final follow-up more than 2 years after surgery. Conclusion The findings reported herein suggest that osteochondral peg fixation is a feasible treatment option for chondral injury of the knee, with satisfactory outcomes.
Highlights
Chondral injuries of the knee are relatively rare, and no consensus exists on the appropriate treatment in such cases
We described two adolescent patients with pure chondral injury of the knee who was successfully treated by an osteochondral autograft transplantation combined with microfracture
Pure chondral injury is rare among knee injuries, and it usually occurs in adolescents, owing to the relatively weak shear strength at the bone–cartilage junction [2]
Summary
Pure chondral injury of the knee is uncommon, and no consensus exists on the optimal treatment of this injury. Several surgical techniques have been reported for treating pure chondral lesions, including fixation with absorbable screws, suture, bone pegs, fibrin glue, and chondral darts [5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12]. They are not employed for cartilage fragment fixation, allograft plug techniques and osteochondral autologous transplantation (OAT) have been used as treatment methods for osteochondritis dissecans [13,14,15,16,17]. This report was approved by the institutional review board of our institution
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