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ANTERIOR CRUCIATE LIGAMENT TEAR FOLLOWING SURGICAL TREATMENT OF PEDIATRIC TIBIAL EMINENCE FRACTURE IN A MULTICENTER COHORT

BACKGROUND: While operative treatment of displaced pediatric tibial eminence fractures has generally been shown to be safe, post-operative complications including arthrofibrosis, infection, fixation failure, and postoperative ipsilateral ACL injuries remain prevalent. The purpose of this study was t...

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Autores principales: O’Donnell, Ryan, Bokshan, Steven, Brown, Kelsey, Aoyama, Julien T, Ganley, Theodore J, Fabricant, Peter D, Patel, Neeraj M., Ellis, Henry B, Green, Daniel W, Jagodzinski, Jason E, Kushare, Indranil, Lee, R Jay, McKay, Scott, Rhodes, Jason, Sachleben, Brant, Sargent, Catherine, Schmale, Gregory A., Yen, Yi-Meng, Mistovich, R Justin, Cruz, Aristides I.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: SAGE Publications 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8284518/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2325967121S00024
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author O’Donnell, Ryan
Bokshan, Steven
Brown, Kelsey
Aoyama, Julien T
Ganley, Theodore J
Fabricant, Peter D
Patel, Neeraj M.
Ellis, Henry B
Green, Daniel W
Jagodzinski, Jason E
Kushare, Indranil
Lee, R Jay
McKay, Scott
Rhodes, Jason
Sachleben, Brant
Sargent, Catherine
Schmale, Gregory A.
Yen, Yi-Meng
Mistovich, R Justin
Cruz, Aristides I.
author_facet O’Donnell, Ryan
Bokshan, Steven
Brown, Kelsey
Aoyama, Julien T
Ganley, Theodore J
Fabricant, Peter D
Patel, Neeraj M.
Ellis, Henry B
Green, Daniel W
Jagodzinski, Jason E
Kushare, Indranil
Lee, R Jay
McKay, Scott
Rhodes, Jason
Sachleben, Brant
Sargent, Catherine
Schmale, Gregory A.
Yen, Yi-Meng
Mistovich, R Justin
Cruz, Aristides I.
author_sort O’Donnell, Ryan
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: While operative treatment of displaced pediatric tibial eminence fractures has generally been shown to be safe, post-operative complications including arthrofibrosis, infection, fixation failure, and postoperative ipsilateral ACL injuries remain prevalent. The purpose of this study was to describe the prevalence of and risk factors for post-operative ACL tears in a cohort of patients surgically treated for tibial eminence fracture. METHODS: We performed a retrospective review of children undergoing treatment of a tibial eminence fracture at 10 tertiary children’s hospitals.. The primary outcome was subsequent ACL rupture. Patients with 2 year follow up data and those that had met the primary outcome within the 2 year period, were analyzed for demographics, risk factors and survival analyses RESULTS: 385 pediatric patients were reviewed. Overall, 46 patients had either 2 year follow up data or met the primary outcome measure of an ACL tear prior to the 2 year mark. Mean age was 11.2 years old (SD 2.8), and the median follow time was 36.4 months (SD 17.7 months) There was a 21.7% incidence of subsequent ACL tear in the cohort analyzed. Subsequent ACL tears occurred at a median of 10.2 months (SD 19.5 months) postoperatively. There was a statistically significant association with higher Myers & McKeever grade tibial spine fractures (Type III and IV) and subsequent ACL rupture (p=0.006). Subsequent ACL tears occurred in patients who were older when they had their original tibial eminence fracture, 13.4 years old versus 11.3 years old (p=0.035). There was no statistically significant relationship between ipsilateral ACL tear and body mass index, operative time, fixation method used, postoperative weight bearing status, type of postoperative immobilization, contact versus non-contact injury mechanism, type of post-operative physical therapy protocol based on chi-squared or t-test (p>0.05). CONCLUSION: Subsequent ipsilateral ACL tears following operatively treated pediatric tibial eminence fractures in a large multicenter cohort occurred at a rate of 21.7%. They were associated with completely displaced (Type III or IV) tibial eminence fractures, and older patients. Clinicians should therefore continue to follow patients for at least 2 years after treatment of pediatric tibial eminence fractures in order to track this potential complication.
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spelling pubmed-82845182021-07-30 ANTERIOR CRUCIATE LIGAMENT TEAR FOLLOWING SURGICAL TREATMENT OF PEDIATRIC TIBIAL EMINENCE FRACTURE IN A MULTICENTER COHORT O’Donnell, Ryan Bokshan, Steven Brown, Kelsey Aoyama, Julien T Ganley, Theodore J Fabricant, Peter D Patel, Neeraj M. Ellis, Henry B Green, Daniel W Jagodzinski, Jason E Kushare, Indranil Lee, R Jay McKay, Scott Rhodes, Jason Sachleben, Brant Sargent, Catherine Schmale, Gregory A. Yen, Yi-Meng Mistovich, R Justin Cruz, Aristides I. Orthop J Sports Med Article BACKGROUND: While operative treatment of displaced pediatric tibial eminence fractures has generally been shown to be safe, post-operative complications including arthrofibrosis, infection, fixation failure, and postoperative ipsilateral ACL injuries remain prevalent. The purpose of this study was to describe the prevalence of and risk factors for post-operative ACL tears in a cohort of patients surgically treated for tibial eminence fracture. METHODS: We performed a retrospective review of children undergoing treatment of a tibial eminence fracture at 10 tertiary children’s hospitals.. The primary outcome was subsequent ACL rupture. Patients with 2 year follow up data and those that had met the primary outcome within the 2 year period, were analyzed for demographics, risk factors and survival analyses RESULTS: 385 pediatric patients were reviewed. Overall, 46 patients had either 2 year follow up data or met the primary outcome measure of an ACL tear prior to the 2 year mark. Mean age was 11.2 years old (SD 2.8), and the median follow time was 36.4 months (SD 17.7 months) There was a 21.7% incidence of subsequent ACL tear in the cohort analyzed. Subsequent ACL tears occurred at a median of 10.2 months (SD 19.5 months) postoperatively. There was a statistically significant association with higher Myers & McKeever grade tibial spine fractures (Type III and IV) and subsequent ACL rupture (p=0.006). Subsequent ACL tears occurred in patients who were older when they had their original tibial eminence fracture, 13.4 years old versus 11.3 years old (p=0.035). There was no statistically significant relationship between ipsilateral ACL tear and body mass index, operative time, fixation method used, postoperative weight bearing status, type of postoperative immobilization, contact versus non-contact injury mechanism, type of post-operative physical therapy protocol based on chi-squared or t-test (p>0.05). CONCLUSION: Subsequent ipsilateral ACL tears following operatively treated pediatric tibial eminence fractures in a large multicenter cohort occurred at a rate of 21.7%. They were associated with completely displaced (Type III or IV) tibial eminence fractures, and older patients. Clinicians should therefore continue to follow patients for at least 2 years after treatment of pediatric tibial eminence fractures in order to track this potential complication. SAGE Publications 2021-07-14 /pmc/articles/PMC8284518/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2325967121S00024 Text en © The Author(s) 2021 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
O’Donnell, Ryan
Bokshan, Steven
Brown, Kelsey
Aoyama, Julien T
Ganley, Theodore J
Fabricant, Peter D
Patel, Neeraj M.
Ellis, Henry B
Green, Daniel W
Jagodzinski, Jason E
Kushare, Indranil
Lee, R Jay
McKay, Scott
Rhodes, Jason
Sachleben, Brant
Sargent, Catherine
Schmale, Gregory A.
Yen, Yi-Meng
Mistovich, R Justin
Cruz, Aristides I.
ANTERIOR CRUCIATE LIGAMENT TEAR FOLLOWING SURGICAL TREATMENT OF PEDIATRIC TIBIAL EMINENCE FRACTURE IN A MULTICENTER COHORT
title ANTERIOR CRUCIATE LIGAMENT TEAR FOLLOWING SURGICAL TREATMENT OF PEDIATRIC TIBIAL EMINENCE FRACTURE IN A MULTICENTER COHORT
title_full ANTERIOR CRUCIATE LIGAMENT TEAR FOLLOWING SURGICAL TREATMENT OF PEDIATRIC TIBIAL EMINENCE FRACTURE IN A MULTICENTER COHORT
title_fullStr ANTERIOR CRUCIATE LIGAMENT TEAR FOLLOWING SURGICAL TREATMENT OF PEDIATRIC TIBIAL EMINENCE FRACTURE IN A MULTICENTER COHORT
title_full_unstemmed ANTERIOR CRUCIATE LIGAMENT TEAR FOLLOWING SURGICAL TREATMENT OF PEDIATRIC TIBIAL EMINENCE FRACTURE IN A MULTICENTER COHORT
title_short ANTERIOR CRUCIATE LIGAMENT TEAR FOLLOWING SURGICAL TREATMENT OF PEDIATRIC TIBIAL EMINENCE FRACTURE IN A MULTICENTER COHORT
title_sort anterior cruciate ligament tear following surgical treatment of pediatric tibial eminence fracture in a multicenter cohort
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8284518/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2325967121S00024
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