Abstract

As our techniques for anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction have evolved, our focus has drifted from anatomy. We believe that it is important to hearken back to anatomy and to fully understand normal anatomy so that we can try to restore it with anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction surgery. The results associated with current anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction techniques are adequate but not exceptional. A recent meta-analysis of the outcomes of anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction indicated that only 33% of patients who had reconstruction with hamstring tendon graft and 41% of those who had reconstruction with bone-patellar tendon-bone graft had normal outcomes according to the final International Knee Documentation Committee score1. There is clearly room for improvement, and we think that the keys to improvement will be based on anatomical anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction. In their paper entitled “Morphology of the Femoral Intercondylar Notch,” Farrow et al. evaluate the anatomy of the lateral intercondylar notch in 200 cadaveric specimens. The authors' goal—namely, to perform a detailed study of the area where the anterior cruciate ligament attaches in order to provide more reliable guidance for femoral tunnel placement—is admirable. The authors note that the osseous ridge that Dr. Clancy termed the “resident's ridge” was present in 194 of …

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