The study had a favorable long-term outcome regarding incidence of radiographic knee OA, knee function and symptoms, and need for ACL reconstruction. Although risk factors for posttraumatic OA are multifactorial, the primary risk factor that stood out in this study was if a meniscectomy had been performed. Early activity modification and neuromuscular knee rehabilitation might also have been related to the low prevalence of radiographic knee OA. In patients with ACL injury willing to moderate activity level to avoid reinjury, initial treatment without ACL reconstruction should be considered.
Early activity modification and neuromuscular rehabilitation resulted in a good knee function and an acceptable activity level in the majority of the nonreconstructed patients. The decline in activity level of patients engaged in contact sports at the time of injury affected their subjective quality of life more than patients involved in noncontact sports.
Eva Ageberg, RP7; MS$ Markus W a l d h , M9 Rose Zatferstrom, RP7; P h D Several tests of human conscious knee proprioception have been described, but there is no consensus or reference standard established. Difficulties remain in the separation of information originating from muscles, tendons, and joints, and the tests cannot discriminate between loss of afferent signals or altered activity in the remaining receptors. There is convincing evidence from several descriptive studies that the afferent information is altered after a knee ligament injury and severely disturbed in some patients with anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injuries. However, an inherent inferior proprioceptive ability may also exist in some individuals, which makes them vulnerable to injuries. The deficits in proprioception have mostly been studied and related to the consciously registered sense, whereas the extent of possible disturbances of the unconscious or reflectory mechanisms is largely unknown. The latter may, at least from a theoretical point of view, be predominantly contributing to the overall afferent regulation, and a possibility for major defects thus exists, since there is no knowledge of the quantified relation between the conscious and unconscious part. The clinical importance of the altered afferent information has not been evaluated properly, and the role of proprioception that contributes to function has yet to be investigated. A higher physiological sensitivity to detecting a passive joint motion closer to full extension has been found both experimentally and clinically, which may protect the joint due to the close proximity to the limit of joint motion. Proprioception has been found to have a relation to subjective knee function, and patients with symptomatic ACL deficiency seem to have larger deficits than asymptomatic individuals. Little is known about whether training can restore defects in sensory information or by which mechanisms possible compensatory pathways are established. In rehabilitation, each patient must, however, create muscle strength, alertness, and stiffness in harmony with the disturbed mechanics of the knee, which are present both after nonoperative treatment of the ACL and after a reconstruction of the ACL. ) Orthop Sports Phys Ther 2001;3 1:567-576.
We found a relatively low prevalence of mild PF OA after ACL injury treated non-operatively, and it had limited impact on knee symptoms and patient-relevant knee function. At follow-up PF OA was associated with higher activity level, meniscal injury, extension and flexion deficit, and ACL reconstruction.
Proprioception of the knee was measured in 20 patients with reconstructed anterior cruciate ligaments and in 19 age-matched controls. The mean time from surgery was 2 years. Three tests of proprioception were used: (a) threshold to detection of passive motion from 20 and 40 degrees toward flexion and extension, (b) active reproduction of a 30 degrees passive angle change, and (c) visual reproduction of a 30 degrees passive angle change. The aim was a complete, bilateral, proprioceptive evaluation of patients who had undergone reconstruction of the anterior cruciate ligament. As compared with those in the control group, the knees with reconstructed anterior cruciate ligaments had a higher threshold to detection of passive motion in the extension trials from 20 and 40 degrees (p = 0.0003 and 0.04, respectively) and in the flexion trials from 20 and 40 degrees (p = 0.004 and 0.0008, respectively). When the uninjured knees of the patients were compared with those in the control group, higher values for threshold to detection of passive motion were found in the flexion trials from 20 degrees (p = 0.002) and 40 degrees (p = 0.02). Thus, decreased proprioceptive ability was present in some measurements of these patients after reconstructive surgery, not only in injured knees but also in uninjured knees, as compared with the reference group. The functional relevance of these findings was not investigated in this study, but the results suggest that bilateral proprioceptive considerations should be made when evaluating prognostic factors, treatment, and risk of contralateral knee injury in patients with reconstructed anterior cruciate ligaments.
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.