Anterior Cruciate Ligament Tear Flashcards

1
Q

Purpose of ACL

A

Stabiliser of knee joint

Limit anterior translation of the tibia relative to the femur.

Contributes to knee rotational stability and especially internal rotation.

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2
Q

Mechanism of injury

A

In an athlete with a hx of suddenly twisting a flexed knee whilst weight-bearing.

Usually occur without contact.

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3
Q

Clinical features

A

Unable to bear weight

Rapid joint swelling (haemarthrosis)

Leg “giving way”

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4
Q

Specific clinical examinations

A

Lachman test

Anterior drawer test

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5
Q

Explain Lachman’s test

A

Place the knee in 30 degrees of flexion

One hand should stabilise the femur and pull the tibia forward.

This is to assess the amount of anterior movement of the tibia compared to the femur.

Examine the other knee for comparison.

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6
Q

Explain anterior drawer test.

A

Flex the knee to 90 degrees

Place thumbs on the joint line and index fingers on the hamstring tendons posteriorly.

Apply force anteriorly to demonstrate any tibial excursion

Compare to other knee.

Anterior Drawer test is less sensitive than Lachman’s

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7
Q

Dx

A

Proximal tibial or distal femur fracture

Meniscal tear

Collateral ligament tear

Quadriceps tendon tear

Patellar ligament tear

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8
Q

Ix

A

X-ray (AP + lateral) to exclude bony injuries, joint effusion or a lipohaemarthrosis.

MRI scan of the knee is gold standard to confirm diagnosis with a sensitivity of 90% and will pick up meniscal tears (50% have a meniscal tear)

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9
Q

What is a Segond fracture?

A

Bony avulsion of the lateral proximal tibia

It is pathognomic of ACL injury

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10
Q

Immediate management

A

Of any acutely swollen knee

RICE

Rest
Ice
Compression
Elevation

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11
Q

What dictates whether you’re going to use conservative management or surgical?

A

Suitability

Current levels of activity (not age)

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12
Q

Explain conservative treatment of ACL tear

A

Rehab to utilise the strength of the quadriceps to stabilise the knee

Patient can usually partially weight bear so a cricket pad knee splint can be applied for comfort.

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13
Q

Explain surgical reconstruction

A

Involves using a tendon (patellar, hamstring, quadriceps), an allograft or an artifical graft.

It is not performed acutely but instead after a period of prehabilitation with physio for a few months.

Acute surgical repair is possible depending on the location of the tear where you re-suture the ends of the torn ligament together again, but they usually fail over time.

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14
Q

Complications

A

Post-traumatic OA

Can happen both in injury and post-surgery

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15
Q

Mechanism of injury PCL

A

High-energy trauma like a direct blow to the proximal tibia during a RTC.

Or low-energy trauma when there is hyperflexion of the knee with a plantar-flexed foot (less common).

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16
Q

Purpose of PCL

A

Primary restraint to posterior tibial translation on femur.

Works to prevent hyperflexion of the knee

17
Q

Clinical features

A

Immediate posterior knee pain

Instability of joint and a +ve posterior drawer test with a posterior sag on examination.

18
Q

Gold-standard ix for diagnosis

A

MRI scan (like in ACL)

19
Q

Management

A

Often treated conservatively with a knee brace and physio.

If they are still symptomatic they may require surgery with insertion of a graft.

If associated with other injuries like a meniscal tear or multi-ligament injury specialist knee surgery for reconstruction is often required.