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Effect of Injury to the Lateral Meniscotibial Ligament and Meniscofibular Ligament on Meniscal Extrusion: Biomechanical Evaluation of the Capsulodesis and Centralization Techniques in a Porcine Knee Model

BACKGROUND: Previous biomechanical studies of the meniscotibial ligament have determined that it contributes to meniscal stability. An injury to it can cause the meniscus to extrude, and reconstruction of that ligament significantly reduces extrusion. PURPOSE: To assess the biomechanical effects of...

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Autores principales: Morales-Avalos, Rodolfo, Diabb-Zavala, José Manuel, Mohamed-Noriega, Nasser, Vilchez-Cavazos, Félix, Perelli, Simone, Padilla-Medina, José Ramón, Torres-Gaytán, Adrián Gerardo, Huesca-Pérez, Héctor Adán, Erosa-Villarreal, Roger Armando, Monllau, Joan Carles
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: SAGE Publications 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10668570/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/38021298
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/23259671231212856
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author Morales-Avalos, Rodolfo
Diabb-Zavala, José Manuel
Mohamed-Noriega, Nasser
Vilchez-Cavazos, Félix
Perelli, Simone
Padilla-Medina, José Ramón
Torres-Gaytán, Adrián Gerardo
Huesca-Pérez, Héctor Adán
Erosa-Villarreal, Roger Armando
Monllau, Joan Carles
author_facet Morales-Avalos, Rodolfo
Diabb-Zavala, José Manuel
Mohamed-Noriega, Nasser
Vilchez-Cavazos, Félix
Perelli, Simone
Padilla-Medina, José Ramón
Torres-Gaytán, Adrián Gerardo
Huesca-Pérez, Héctor Adán
Erosa-Villarreal, Roger Armando
Monllau, Joan Carles
author_sort Morales-Avalos, Rodolfo
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Previous biomechanical studies of the meniscotibial ligament have determined that it contributes to meniscal stability. An injury to it can cause the meniscus to extrude, and reconstruction of that ligament significantly reduces extrusion. PURPOSE: To assess the biomechanical effects of sectioning the lateral meniscotibial ligament (LMTL) and the meniscofibular ligament (MFL) with respect to the radial mobility of the lateral meniscus and to evaluate the biomechanical effects of the capsulodesis and centralization techniques. STUDY DESIGN: Controlled laboratory study. METHODS: The lateral meniscus of 22 porcine knees was evaluated. They were mounted on a testing apparatus to apply muscle and ground-reaction forces. The meniscus was evaluated at 30° and 60° of knee flexion using 2 markers placed on the posterior cruciate ligament and the lateral meniscus after applying an axial compression of 200 N to the knee joint. Measurements were recorded under 5 conditions: intact lateral meniscus, injury of the LMTL, subsequent injury of the MFL, the use of the open capsulodesis technique, and the reconstruction of the LMTL and the MFL with the centralization technique. RESULTS: The distance between the 2 markers was significantly greater in the extrusion group (combined lesion of the LMTL and MFL) than in the intact or reconstruction groups (capsulodesis and centralization techniques; P < .001 in all cases). In the cases of load application, no significant differences were observed between the control group (intact meniscus) and the groups on which the reconstruction techniques were performed. There were also no differences when comparing the results obtained between both reconstruction techniques. In all settings, the distance between the 2 markers increased with the increase in the knee flexion angle. CONCLUSION: In a porcine model, the LMTL and the MFL participated as restrictors of the radial mobility of the lateral meniscus during loading. Their injury caused a significant increase in lateral meniscal extrusion, and the centralization and the capsulodesis procedures were able to reduce extrusion. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: This study demonstrates the capacity of the LMTL and the MFL to restrict the radial mobility of the lateral meniscus during loading and how it is affected when they are injured.
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spelling pubmed-106685702023-11-23 Effect of Injury to the Lateral Meniscotibial Ligament and Meniscofibular Ligament on Meniscal Extrusion: Biomechanical Evaluation of the Capsulodesis and Centralization Techniques in a Porcine Knee Model Morales-Avalos, Rodolfo Diabb-Zavala, José Manuel Mohamed-Noriega, Nasser Vilchez-Cavazos, Félix Perelli, Simone Padilla-Medina, José Ramón Torres-Gaytán, Adrián Gerardo Huesca-Pérez, Héctor Adán Erosa-Villarreal, Roger Armando Monllau, Joan Carles Orthop J Sports Med Original Research BACKGROUND: Previous biomechanical studies of the meniscotibial ligament have determined that it contributes to meniscal stability. An injury to it can cause the meniscus to extrude, and reconstruction of that ligament significantly reduces extrusion. PURPOSE: To assess the biomechanical effects of sectioning the lateral meniscotibial ligament (LMTL) and the meniscofibular ligament (MFL) with respect to the radial mobility of the lateral meniscus and to evaluate the biomechanical effects of the capsulodesis and centralization techniques. STUDY DESIGN: Controlled laboratory study. METHODS: The lateral meniscus of 22 porcine knees was evaluated. They were mounted on a testing apparatus to apply muscle and ground-reaction forces. The meniscus was evaluated at 30° and 60° of knee flexion using 2 markers placed on the posterior cruciate ligament and the lateral meniscus after applying an axial compression of 200 N to the knee joint. Measurements were recorded under 5 conditions: intact lateral meniscus, injury of the LMTL, subsequent injury of the MFL, the use of the open capsulodesis technique, and the reconstruction of the LMTL and the MFL with the centralization technique. RESULTS: The distance between the 2 markers was significantly greater in the extrusion group (combined lesion of the LMTL and MFL) than in the intact or reconstruction groups (capsulodesis and centralization techniques; P < .001 in all cases). In the cases of load application, no significant differences were observed between the control group (intact meniscus) and the groups on which the reconstruction techniques were performed. There were also no differences when comparing the results obtained between both reconstruction techniques. In all settings, the distance between the 2 markers increased with the increase in the knee flexion angle. CONCLUSION: In a porcine model, the LMTL and the MFL participated as restrictors of the radial mobility of the lateral meniscus during loading. Their injury caused a significant increase in lateral meniscal extrusion, and the centralization and the capsulodesis procedures were able to reduce extrusion. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: This study demonstrates the capacity of the LMTL and the MFL to restrict the radial mobility of the lateral meniscus during loading and how it is affected when they are injured. SAGE Publications 2023-11-23 /pmc/articles/PMC10668570/ /pubmed/38021298 http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/23259671231212856 Text en © The Author(s) 2023 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 4.0 License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) which permits non-commercial use, reproduction and distribution of the work as published without adaptation or alteration, without further permission provided the original work is attributed as specified on the SAGE and Open Access page (https://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/open-access-at-sage).
spellingShingle Original Research
Morales-Avalos, Rodolfo
Diabb-Zavala, José Manuel
Mohamed-Noriega, Nasser
Vilchez-Cavazos, Félix
Perelli, Simone
Padilla-Medina, José Ramón
Torres-Gaytán, Adrián Gerardo
Huesca-Pérez, Héctor Adán
Erosa-Villarreal, Roger Armando
Monllau, Joan Carles
Effect of Injury to the Lateral Meniscotibial Ligament and Meniscofibular Ligament on Meniscal Extrusion: Biomechanical Evaluation of the Capsulodesis and Centralization Techniques in a Porcine Knee Model
title Effect of Injury to the Lateral Meniscotibial Ligament and Meniscofibular Ligament on Meniscal Extrusion: Biomechanical Evaluation of the Capsulodesis and Centralization Techniques in a Porcine Knee Model
title_full Effect of Injury to the Lateral Meniscotibial Ligament and Meniscofibular Ligament on Meniscal Extrusion: Biomechanical Evaluation of the Capsulodesis and Centralization Techniques in a Porcine Knee Model
title_fullStr Effect of Injury to the Lateral Meniscotibial Ligament and Meniscofibular Ligament on Meniscal Extrusion: Biomechanical Evaluation of the Capsulodesis and Centralization Techniques in a Porcine Knee Model
title_full_unstemmed Effect of Injury to the Lateral Meniscotibial Ligament and Meniscofibular Ligament on Meniscal Extrusion: Biomechanical Evaluation of the Capsulodesis and Centralization Techniques in a Porcine Knee Model
title_short Effect of Injury to the Lateral Meniscotibial Ligament and Meniscofibular Ligament on Meniscal Extrusion: Biomechanical Evaluation of the Capsulodesis and Centralization Techniques in a Porcine Knee Model
title_sort effect of injury to the lateral meniscotibial ligament and meniscofibular ligament on meniscal extrusion: biomechanical evaluation of the capsulodesis and centralization techniques in a porcine knee model
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10668570/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/38021298
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/23259671231212856
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