The importance of the medial and lateral compartment ligaments of the knee in relation to valgus-varus and axial rotation instability was investigated. Mobility patterns were drawn from 20 osteoligamentous knee preparations after successive transections of the structures. Cutting of the medial collateral ligament resulted only in slight valgus instability and modest anteromedial instability. When the medial posterior joint capsule was also cut, both types of instability increased, and moreover, the knee became posteromedially unstable. Cutting of the lateral collateral ligament produced only a little varus instability and anterolateral rotatory instability, but varus instability increased considerably when the posterior lateral capsule was also transected. In this latter situation, even marked posterolateral rotatory instability was found. Isolated transection of the medial or lateral collateral ligament did not cause any major valgus or varus instability, but when the posterior capsule was also transected, a considerable degree rotatory instability could be found even though the cruciate ligaments were intact.
This randomized double-blind study compared the analgesic efficacy and tolerability of intramuscular lornoxicam and tramadol in 76 patients with moderate to unbearable pain following arthroscopic reconstruction of the anterior cruciate ligament using the patella bone-tendon-bone technique. Patients receiving a single dose of lornoxicam 16 mg experienced significantly greater total pain relief than patients receiving tramadol 100 mg over the following 8 hours. Lornoxicam had greater analgesic efficacy than tramadol in patients with moderate baseline pain but was of equivalent efficacy in those with severe/unbearable baseline pain. Fewer patients in the lornoxicam group required rescue medication (58% vs. 77%, respectively). Patients' global impression of efficacy showed lornoxicam to be superior to tramadol with 82% and 49% of patients, respectively, rating treatment as good, very good, or excellent. Following multiple-dose administration of lornoxicam (8 mg tid) or tramadol (100 mg tid) for 3 days, efficacy profiles similar to those following a single dose were obtained. Thus, slightly fewer patients in the lornoxicam group required rescue medication, and patients' global impression of efficacy again favored lornoxicam. Adverse events were reported by 38 of the 76 patients and were mainly mild to moderate in severity. Significantly fewer patients reported one or more adverse events with lornoxicam than with tramadol (14 vs. 24, respectively). Thus, intramuscular lornoxicam offers a useful alternative to tramadol for the treatment of moderate to severe postoperative pain.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.