Cargando…

Poster 127: The Posteromedial Knee: An Anatomic, Biomechanical, and Radiographic Analysis of the Posterior Oblique Ligament

OBJECTIVES: The structures of the posteromedial knee are important for coronal and rotational stability. These can be injured along with the medial collateral ligament (MCL) during traumatic or sporting activities. The posterior oblique ligament (POL) is largest and best-known structure at the poste...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Bryniarski, Anna, Fossum, Bradley, Brady, Alex, Godin, Jonathan, Casp, Aaron
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: SAGE Publications 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10395175/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2325967123S00118
_version_ 1785083535656222720
author Bryniarski, Anna
Fossum, Bradley
Brady, Alex
Godin, Jonathan
Casp, Aaron
author_facet Bryniarski, Anna
Fossum, Bradley
Brady, Alex
Godin, Jonathan
Casp, Aaron
author_sort Bryniarski, Anna
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVES: The structures of the posteromedial knee are important for coronal and rotational stability. These can be injured along with the medial collateral ligament (MCL) during traumatic or sporting activities. The posterior oblique ligament (POL) is largest and best-known structure at the posteromedial knee at risk of injury. When surgical reconstruction is needed, the location and positioning of this reconstruction is often grouped together with the medial collateral ligament, despite the specific biomechanical role of and the much larger anatomic area covered by the various structures of the posteromedial knee. The POL provides a complex load sharing interplay with the MCL, such that these ligaments both contribute to resist the combination of valgus and rotational strains. As such, the POL is an important structure that contributes to the stability of the medial knee, and severe injuries may benefit from a separate procedure to directly address the ligament. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the anatomy of the posteromedial knee as well as the radiographic locations and biomechanical strengths of the POL. METHODS: 10 nonpaired fresh cadaveric knees were dissected and the medial structures were elevated off bone, except for the POL. The anatomic locations were noted and recorded with a robotic coordinate measuring device to establish structure location, distances, and attachment areas for the superficial MCL, adductor tubercle, medial epicondyle, meniscofemoral ligament, tibiofemoral ligament, semimembranosus and the POL. For the radiographic analysis, radiopaque T-pins were placed in the POL attachment sites, as well as other clinically relevant and bony landmarks. True anteroposterior (AP) and lateral radiographs were taken with fluoroscopy. Digital software was utilized to measure the distances from these anatomic points to the center of the attachment of the POL. Biomechanically, the specimens were loaded onto a computerized actuator, and all soft tissues connecting the tibia and the femur were resected except for the POL. A pull-to-failure test was completed and the ultimate tensile strength and location of the failure was recorded. RESULTS: On average, the POL attachment on the femur is 15.4mm posterior and 6.6mm superior to the medial epicondyle. On the tibia, the POL attachment center is 21.4mm posterior and 2.2mm inferior to the center of the meniscotibial ligament, and 28.6mm posterior and 41.9mm superior to the center of the superficial MCL tibial attachment. On radiographic exam, the femoral POL was 17.6mm distal to the adductor tubercle, and 17.3mm posterosuperior to the medial epicondyle on the lateral radiograph. On the tibial side, the center of the POL attachment is 5.0mm distal to the joint line on the AP radiograph and 6.3mm distal to the tibial joint line on the lateral, at the far posterior aspect of the tibia. The biomechanical pull-to-failure demonstrated an average ultimate tensile strength of 225.2N ± 71.0N. CONCLUSIONS: This study successfully localized the medial and posteromedial knee structures, establishing their anatomic location, the radiographic location of the POL relative to clinically relevant structures, and established the pull-to-failure ultimate tensile strength. This provides good clinical information for location and type of graft that can help anatomically reconstruct the central arm of the POL.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10395175
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher SAGE Publications
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-103951752023-08-03 Poster 127: The Posteromedial Knee: An Anatomic, Biomechanical, and Radiographic Analysis of the Posterior Oblique Ligament Bryniarski, Anna Fossum, Bradley Brady, Alex Godin, Jonathan Casp, Aaron Orthop J Sports Med Article OBJECTIVES: The structures of the posteromedial knee are important for coronal and rotational stability. These can be injured along with the medial collateral ligament (MCL) during traumatic or sporting activities. The posterior oblique ligament (POL) is largest and best-known structure at the posteromedial knee at risk of injury. When surgical reconstruction is needed, the location and positioning of this reconstruction is often grouped together with the medial collateral ligament, despite the specific biomechanical role of and the much larger anatomic area covered by the various structures of the posteromedial knee. The POL provides a complex load sharing interplay with the MCL, such that these ligaments both contribute to resist the combination of valgus and rotational strains. As such, the POL is an important structure that contributes to the stability of the medial knee, and severe injuries may benefit from a separate procedure to directly address the ligament. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the anatomy of the posteromedial knee as well as the radiographic locations and biomechanical strengths of the POL. METHODS: 10 nonpaired fresh cadaveric knees were dissected and the medial structures were elevated off bone, except for the POL. The anatomic locations were noted and recorded with a robotic coordinate measuring device to establish structure location, distances, and attachment areas for the superficial MCL, adductor tubercle, medial epicondyle, meniscofemoral ligament, tibiofemoral ligament, semimembranosus and the POL. For the radiographic analysis, radiopaque T-pins were placed in the POL attachment sites, as well as other clinically relevant and bony landmarks. True anteroposterior (AP) and lateral radiographs were taken with fluoroscopy. Digital software was utilized to measure the distances from these anatomic points to the center of the attachment of the POL. Biomechanically, the specimens were loaded onto a computerized actuator, and all soft tissues connecting the tibia and the femur were resected except for the POL. A pull-to-failure test was completed and the ultimate tensile strength and location of the failure was recorded. RESULTS: On average, the POL attachment on the femur is 15.4mm posterior and 6.6mm superior to the medial epicondyle. On the tibia, the POL attachment center is 21.4mm posterior and 2.2mm inferior to the center of the meniscotibial ligament, and 28.6mm posterior and 41.9mm superior to the center of the superficial MCL tibial attachment. On radiographic exam, the femoral POL was 17.6mm distal to the adductor tubercle, and 17.3mm posterosuperior to the medial epicondyle on the lateral radiograph. On the tibial side, the center of the POL attachment is 5.0mm distal to the joint line on the AP radiograph and 6.3mm distal to the tibial joint line on the lateral, at the far posterior aspect of the tibia. The biomechanical pull-to-failure demonstrated an average ultimate tensile strength of 225.2N ± 71.0N. CONCLUSIONS: This study successfully localized the medial and posteromedial knee structures, establishing their anatomic location, the radiographic location of the POL relative to clinically relevant structures, and established the pull-to-failure ultimate tensile strength. This provides good clinical information for location and type of graft that can help anatomically reconstruct the central arm of the POL. SAGE Publications 2023-07-31 /pmc/articles/PMC10395175/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2325967123S00118 Text en © The Author(s) 2023 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This open-access article is published and distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution - NonCommercial - No Derivatives License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits the noncommercial use, distribution, and reproduction of the article in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. You may not alter, transform, or build upon this article without the permission of the Author(s). For article reuse guidelines, please visit SAGE’s website at http://www.sagepub.com/journals-permissions.
spellingShingle Article
Bryniarski, Anna
Fossum, Bradley
Brady, Alex
Godin, Jonathan
Casp, Aaron
Poster 127: The Posteromedial Knee: An Anatomic, Biomechanical, and Radiographic Analysis of the Posterior Oblique Ligament
title Poster 127: The Posteromedial Knee: An Anatomic, Biomechanical, and Radiographic Analysis of the Posterior Oblique Ligament
title_full Poster 127: The Posteromedial Knee: An Anatomic, Biomechanical, and Radiographic Analysis of the Posterior Oblique Ligament
title_fullStr Poster 127: The Posteromedial Knee: An Anatomic, Biomechanical, and Radiographic Analysis of the Posterior Oblique Ligament
title_full_unstemmed Poster 127: The Posteromedial Knee: An Anatomic, Biomechanical, and Radiographic Analysis of the Posterior Oblique Ligament
title_short Poster 127: The Posteromedial Knee: An Anatomic, Biomechanical, and Radiographic Analysis of the Posterior Oblique Ligament
title_sort poster 127: the posteromedial knee: an anatomic, biomechanical, and radiographic analysis of the posterior oblique ligament
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10395175/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2325967123S00118
work_keys_str_mv AT bryniarskianna poster127theposteromedialkneeananatomicbiomechanicalandradiographicanalysisoftheposteriorobliqueligament
AT fossumbradley poster127theposteromedialkneeananatomicbiomechanicalandradiographicanalysisoftheposteriorobliqueligament
AT bradyalex poster127theposteromedialkneeananatomicbiomechanicalandradiographicanalysisoftheposteriorobliqueligament
AT godinjonathan poster127theposteromedialkneeananatomicbiomechanicalandradiographicanalysisoftheposteriorobliqueligament
AT caspaaron poster127theposteromedialkneeananatomicbiomechanicalandradiographicanalysisoftheposteriorobliqueligament