Abstract

IntroductionInjuries of the posterolateral corner (PLC) of the knee lead to chronic lateral and external rotational instability and are often associated with PCL injuries. Numerous surgical techniques for repair and reconstruction of the PLC are established. Recently, several arthroscopic techniques have been published in order to address different degrees of PLC injuries through reconstruction of one or more functional structures. The purpose of this systematic review is to give an overview about arthroscopic techniques of posterolateral corner reconstructions and to evaluate their safeness.Materials and methodsA systematic review of the literature on arthroscopic reconstructions of the posterolateral corner of the knee according to the PRISMA guidelines was performed using PubMed MEDLINE and Web of Science Databases on June 15th, 2020. Inclusion criteria were descriptions of surgical techniques to reconstruct different aspects of the posterolateral corner either strictly arthroscopically or minimally-invasive with an arthroscopic assistance.ResultsArthroscopic techniques differ with regard to the extent of reconstructed units (popliteus tendon, popliteofibular ligament, lateral collateral ligament), surgical approach (transseptal, lateral) and biomechanical results (anatomic vs. non-anatomic reconstruction, restoration of rotational instability and/or lateral instability).ConclusionDifferent approaches to arthroscopic PLC reconstruction are presented, yet clinical results are scarce. Up to now good and excellent clinical results are reported. No major complications are reported in the literature so far.

Highlights

  • Injuries of the posterolateral corner (PLC) of the knee lead to chronic lateral and external rotational instability and are often associated with PCL injuries

  • It consists of the lateral collateral ligament (LCL) and the popliteus complex (PTC)

  • The popliteus complex itself contains the popliteus muscle tendon unit (PLT) and the arcuate complex (AC), which is formed by the popliteofibular ligament (PFL), the fabellofibular ligament and the popliteomeniscal fibers [1]

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Summary

Introduction

The posterolateral corner of the knee has a complex anatomic composition, which was only thoroughly discovered in recent years and has since gained increased focus in diagnostics and treatment. The instability of the posterolateral corner can be differentiated in dorsal instability, which is mainly caused by the PCL, lateral (varus) instability due to injury to the lateral collateral ligament (LCL) and rotational instability, which is mainly linked to lesions of the popliteus complex [3]. This results in a modified classification of dorsolateral instabilities (Fig. 2): Type 1: isolated posterior instability through isolated injury of the PCL. These recently emerged arthroscopic reconstruction techniques of the posterolateral corner are described, summarized and compared

Materials and methods
Findings
Compliance with ethical standards
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