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Functional outcome in patients following cartilage regeneration outcome at minimum follow-up of 12 months

INTRODUCTION: Several studies have focused on the return to play rate after ACL reconstruction. Whereas most studies just report the rate as a result, only few studies evaluate specific parameters and tests to further investigate the conditions of when the patients should return to sports. HYPOTHESE...

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Autores principales: Liefke, Christian, Zantop, Christian, Terai, Shozaburo, Zantop, Thore
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: SAGE Publications 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7543199/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2325967120S00549
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author Liefke, Christian
Zantop, Christian
Terai, Shozaburo
Zantop, Thore
author_facet Liefke, Christian
Zantop, Christian
Terai, Shozaburo
Zantop, Thore
author_sort Liefke, Christian
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Several studies have focused on the return to play rate after ACL reconstruction. Whereas most studies just report the rate as a result, only few studies evaluate specific parameters and tests to further investigate the conditions of when the patients should return to sports. HYPOTHESES: Aim of this study was to compare the return to competition rate of patients 12 months after ACL reconstruction and correlate the rate and re-rupture fate to the assessed multifactorial “return-to-sports” test 3 months after ACL reconstruction at our institution. METHODS: A total of 51 Patients undergoing ACL reconstruction are prospectively evaluated using a “return-to-sports” test 3 months following ACL reconstruction. Inclusion criteria was isolated ACL rupture, Level 1 sports participation, free range of motion at FU 3 months, age >18 and <50, no associated ligamentous or meniscal injury influencing the rehab protocol and intact contralateral leg. ACL reconstructions were performed by a single surgeon with semitendinosus graft and standardized rehabilitation protocol. Follow-up at 3 months postoperatively was performed using a functional analysis including isokinetic strength measurements (BTE-primus), proprioceptive tests (MTF tests) and a 3d-motion analysis (myomotion, Noraxon) during bilateral drop jumps and single leg hop tests. To evaluate the return to play rate and recurrent instability problems a survey was used at timepoint 12 months postoperatively (n=43 at abstract submission). RESULTS: At timepoint 12 months following ACL reconstruction 6 of 43 currently evaluated patients did not return to competition (6/43). A total of 5 patients were evaluated as moderate to high risk for ACL recurrent instability in the return-to-sports analysis at three months whereas one patient not returning to competition showed a not elevated risk for ACL recurrent instability in the analysis. The was a high correlation of patients revealing better functional results in the functional analysis (isokinetic strength, proprioceptive test and a 3d-motion analysis) and returning to sports. A total of 8 patients (4/43) suffered a recurrent instability after returning to sports. CONCLUSION: This prospective analysis of patients following semitendinosus ACL reconstruction with one single surgeon implicates that the rate of returning to sports in patients using a multifactorial “return-to-sports” analysis at 3 months postoperatively is higher compared to the rate of patients without such an analysis in the literature. We found a high correlation between better functional results and return to play rate as well as a re-rupture rate of 10% in patients after returning to sports.
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spelling pubmed-75431992020-10-20 Functional outcome in patients following cartilage regeneration outcome at minimum follow-up of 12 months Liefke, Christian Zantop, Christian Terai, Shozaburo Zantop, Thore Orthop J Sports Med Article INTRODUCTION: Several studies have focused on the return to play rate after ACL reconstruction. Whereas most studies just report the rate as a result, only few studies evaluate specific parameters and tests to further investigate the conditions of when the patients should return to sports. HYPOTHESES: Aim of this study was to compare the return to competition rate of patients 12 months after ACL reconstruction and correlate the rate and re-rupture fate to the assessed multifactorial “return-to-sports” test 3 months after ACL reconstruction at our institution. METHODS: A total of 51 Patients undergoing ACL reconstruction are prospectively evaluated using a “return-to-sports” test 3 months following ACL reconstruction. Inclusion criteria was isolated ACL rupture, Level 1 sports participation, free range of motion at FU 3 months, age >18 and <50, no associated ligamentous or meniscal injury influencing the rehab protocol and intact contralateral leg. ACL reconstructions were performed by a single surgeon with semitendinosus graft and standardized rehabilitation protocol. Follow-up at 3 months postoperatively was performed using a functional analysis including isokinetic strength measurements (BTE-primus), proprioceptive tests (MTF tests) and a 3d-motion analysis (myomotion, Noraxon) during bilateral drop jumps and single leg hop tests. To evaluate the return to play rate and recurrent instability problems a survey was used at timepoint 12 months postoperatively (n=43 at abstract submission). RESULTS: At timepoint 12 months following ACL reconstruction 6 of 43 currently evaluated patients did not return to competition (6/43). A total of 5 patients were evaluated as moderate to high risk for ACL recurrent instability in the return-to-sports analysis at three months whereas one patient not returning to competition showed a not elevated risk for ACL recurrent instability in the analysis. The was a high correlation of patients revealing better functional results in the functional analysis (isokinetic strength, proprioceptive test and a 3d-motion analysis) and returning to sports. A total of 8 patients (4/43) suffered a recurrent instability after returning to sports. CONCLUSION: This prospective analysis of patients following semitendinosus ACL reconstruction with one single surgeon implicates that the rate of returning to sports in patients using a multifactorial “return-to-sports” analysis at 3 months postoperatively is higher compared to the rate of patients without such an analysis in the literature. We found a high correlation between better functional results and return to play rate as well as a re-rupture rate of 10% in patients after returning to sports. SAGE Publications 2020-09-30 /pmc/articles/PMC7543199/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2325967120S00549 Text en © The Author(s) 2020 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
Liefke, Christian
Zantop, Christian
Terai, Shozaburo
Zantop, Thore
Functional outcome in patients following cartilage regeneration outcome at minimum follow-up of 12 months
title Functional outcome in patients following cartilage regeneration outcome at minimum follow-up of 12 months
title_full Functional outcome in patients following cartilage regeneration outcome at minimum follow-up of 12 months
title_fullStr Functional outcome in patients following cartilage regeneration outcome at minimum follow-up of 12 months
title_full_unstemmed Functional outcome in patients following cartilage regeneration outcome at minimum follow-up of 12 months
title_short Functional outcome in patients following cartilage regeneration outcome at minimum follow-up of 12 months
title_sort functional outcome in patients following cartilage regeneration outcome at minimum follow-up of 12 months
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7543199/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2325967120S00549
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