1991
DOI: 10.1016/0749-8063(91)90123-f
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The effects of graft tensioning on the laxity and kinematics of the anterior cruciate ligament reconstructed knee

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Cited by 113 publications
(60 citation statements)
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References 24 publications
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“…Brower et al [4] used the Genucom setup and found that approximately 60% of the increase in i/e rotation after cutting the ACL was due to additional internal rotation. Melby et al [12], also using the Genucom, on the other hand, found no increase in i/e rotation at all after cutting the ACL. Lane et al [10] discovered that 75% of the additional i/e rotation was internal.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Brower et al [4] used the Genucom setup and found that approximately 60% of the increase in i/e rotation after cutting the ACL was due to additional internal rotation. Melby et al [12], also using the Genucom, on the other hand, found no increase in i/e rotation at all after cutting the ACL. Lane et al [10] discovered that 75% of the additional i/e rotation was internal.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…High graft tension may cause both abnormal kinematics of the knee and also impaired remodeling of the graft. Abnormal knee kinematics include an overconstrained 225 N anterior limit of motion, posterior subluxation of the tibia [2,14,30], and inhibited knee extension [2]. Impairments to the graft include excessive graft wear at the femoral tunnel margin [ 191, and poor revavascularization, myxoid degeneration, and inferior mechanical properties [23,46].…”
Section: Importance and Interpretutionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…If the initial tension is excessive, then the corresponding increase in graft tension could reach the failure load of the graft-fixation complex [27]. Posterior tibial subluxation, also caused by excessive initial tension, will alter the A/P load-displacement behavior of the knee [30].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…They introduced the term "over corrected knees" for these specimens. Melby et al [17] confirmed the findings of Lewis et al [15] and stated that abnormal joint stiffness in ACL reconstructed knees results in excessive long-term joint wear. Bylski-Austrow et al [3] and Fleming et al [7] found that increasing pretensions of the artificial ligaments cause increased posterior shifts of the tibia.…”
Section: Kinematicsmentioning
confidence: 66%