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Title: Meniscal tear summary
Description: Meniscal tear summary for student of physical therapy. Medicine orthopedic
Description: Meniscal tear summary for student of physical therapy. Medicine orthopedic
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MENISCAL TEAR
orthopedic consultant
cairo university
BUC
Meniscal Tears
Meniscal tears are common sports-related injuries in young athletes and can also
present as a degenerative condition in older patients
...
pathoantomy
non-contact pivoting injury
tibia translates anteriorly while knee is in slight flexion and
valgus
blow to the lateral aspect of the knee
common activities are soccer, basketball, skiing, and football
Associated conditions
meniscal tears
o lateral meniscal tears in 54% of acute ACL tears, medial in chronic cases
PCL, LCL/PLC injuries
chronic ACL deficient knees associated with
o chondral injuries
Anatomy
o two bundles measuring combined 32mm length x 7-12mm width
o bundles named for tibial attachment
anteromedial bundle
tightest in flexion
primarily responsible for restraining anterior tibial translation
(anterior drawer test)
posterolateral bundle
tightest in extension
primarily responsible for rotational stability (pivot shift test)
femoral attachment
lateral intercondylar ridge demarcates the anterior edge of the
ACL
bifurcate ridge separates the anteromedial and posterolateral
bundle attachment
tibial attachment
anterior tibia, between intercondylar eminences
Composition
o 90% Type I collagen
o 10% Type III collagen
Blood supply
o middle geniculate artery
Innervation
o
posterior articular nerve (branch of tibial nerve)
Biomechanics and Function
o
provides 85% of the stability to prevent anterior translation of the tibia relative
to the femur
o acts as a secondary restraint to tibial rotation and varus/valgus rotation
PRESENTATION
History
o felt a "pop"
o pain deep in the knee
o immediate swelling (70%) / hemarthrosis
Symptoms
o generalized knee pain
o feelings of instability preventing return to sport
o difficulty weightbearing
Physical exam
o inspection
effusion
quadricep avoidance gait (does not actively extend knee)
coronal or sagittal plane deformity
varus deformity increases risk for ACL re-rupture
o
motion
lack of full extension secondary to meniscal injury or arthrofibrosis
evaluate for meniscal or concomitant ligamentous injuries (McMurray,
Dial test, varus/valgus stress)
Neurovascular
o evaluate peroneal function following high energy mechanisms and suspicion for
multi-ligamentous injury pattern
Provocative tests
o Lachman's test
most sensitive exam test
PCL tear may give "false" Lachman due to posterior subluxation
o Pivot shift
o Anterior drawer test
IMAGING
Radiographs
o recommended views
AP, lateral, /skyline view
o findings
often normal
Segond fracture (avulsion fracture of the proximal lateral tibia)
MRI
indications
to confirm clinical diagnosis of ACL rupture and evaluate for concomitant
pathology
TREATMENT
Treatment individualized to patient based on activity level, age, demands, and
concomitant pathology
Nonoperative
o physical therapy, lifestyle modifications
indications
low demand patients with decreased laxity
Operative
ACL reconstruction
indications
must have full motion of knee restored following injury (unless meniscal
tear causing mechanical block)
lack of pre-operative motion risk factor for post-operative
arthrofibrosis
younger, more active patients
prior ACL reconstruction failure
ACL repair
indications
previously abandoned but increased interest recently in pediatric
populations and avulsion rupture patterns
outcomes
high failure rates
revision reconstruction
indications
failure of prior ACL reconstruction with instability during
desired activities
Concurrent pathology
o MCL injury
indications
if low grade MCL injury amenable to non-operative treatment,
allow MCL to heal prior to ACL reconstruction
if high grade MCL injury necessitating repair/reconstruction,
may be done concurrently with ACL
o meniscal tears
indications
perform meniscal repair or meniscectomy at time of ACL reconstruction
outcomes
increased meniscal healing rate when repaired at the same time as ACL
o chondral injuries
indications
partial- or full-thickness chondral injury may be treated at time of ACL
reconstruction in staged fashion if injury necessitates
outcomes
presence of chondral defects consistently lowers long-term patientreported outcomes following ACL reconstruction
o posterior cruciate ligament and posterolateral corner injuries
indications
may reconstruct concurrently with ACL reconstruction or as staged
procedure
outcomes
failure to recognize and address PCL/PLC injuries will lead to varus
instability and ACL graft overload
o high tibial osteotomy or distal femoral osteotomy
indications
limb malalignment in both the coronal and sagittal plane must be
addressed before or at the same time as ligament reconstruction
outcomes
high ACL failure rates in unaddressed limb malalignment
PEDIATRIC CONSIDERATIONS
Physis
o < 14 yrs with open physis
o the onset of menarche is the best determinant of skeletal maturity in females
Treatment
o Nonoperative
indications
compliant, low demand patient with no additional intra-articular
pathologies
partial ACL tear (60% of adolescents have partial tears) with
near normal Lachman and pivot shift
o Surgery
indications
complete ACL tear
Techniques
intra-articular
o physis-sparing (all intra-epiphyseal)
o trans-physeal
o
partial trans-physeal
REHABILITATION
Early post-operative
o immediate
aggressive cryotherapy (ice)
immediate weight bearing shown to reduce patellofemoral pain
emphasize early full passive extension
o early rehab
focus rehab on exercises that do not place excess stress on graft
emphasize closed chain exercises
avoid
open chain quadriceps strengthening
Return to play
o no widely accepted criteria supporting clearance or timing to return to sport
previously held consensus is no sooner than 9 months following surgery
clearance for return to play should be made between surgeon and patient
psychological factors play large role in timing of return and should not
be overlooked
COMPLICATION
Intra-operative complications
graft-tunnel mismatch
posterior wall blowout
Graft failure due to tunnel malposition
Graft failure due to other causes eg: inadequate graft fixation or hardware failure,
missed diagnosis of concomitant ligamentous injuries or bony malalignment
Infection and septic arthritis
Loss of motion & arthrofibrosis
Late osteoarthritis
RSD (complex regional pain syndrome)
Title: Meniscal tear summary
Description: Meniscal tear summary for student of physical therapy. Medicine orthopedic
Description: Meniscal tear summary for student of physical therapy. Medicine orthopedic