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Factors Associated with Stiffness Following Pediatric and Adolescent ACL Reconstruction: Early Results from Score: A Multi-Center Quality Improvement Registry

BACKGROUND: Anterior Cruciate Ligament reconstruction (ACLr) is commonly performed in pediatric and adolescent patients. The most common early complication associated with ACLr is stiffness, including motion loss and arthrofibrosis. There is minimal literature regarding risk factors for stiffness fo...

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Autores principales: Cooper, Savannah, Adsit, Lizzie R., Schmitz, Matthew, Ganley, Theodore, Ellington, Matthew, Rhodes, Jason, Frank, Jeremy, Mansour, Alfred, Saper, Michael, Parikh, Shital, Mayer, Stephanie, Wilson, Philip, Shea, Kevin, Ellis, Henry B.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: SAGE Publications 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9112772/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2325967121S00387
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author Cooper, Savannah
Adsit, Lizzie R.
Schmitz, Matthew
Ganley, Theodore
Ellington, Matthew
Rhodes, Jason
Frank, Jeremy
Mansour, Alfred
Saper, Michael
Parikh, Shital
Mayer, Stephanie
Wilson, Philip
Shea, Kevin
Ellis, Henry B.
author_facet Cooper, Savannah
Adsit, Lizzie R.
Schmitz, Matthew
Ganley, Theodore
Ellington, Matthew
Rhodes, Jason
Frank, Jeremy
Mansour, Alfred
Saper, Michael
Parikh, Shital
Mayer, Stephanie
Wilson, Philip
Shea, Kevin
Ellis, Henry B.
author_sort Cooper, Savannah
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Anterior Cruciate Ligament reconstruction (ACLr) is commonly performed in pediatric and adolescent patients. The most common early complication associated with ACLr is stiffness, including motion loss and arthrofibrosis. There is minimal literature regarding risk factors for stiffness following ACLr in this age group. HYPOTHESIS/PURPOSE: To evaluate the incidence and risk factors associated with stiffness following ACLr using a multi-center quality improvement registry. METHODS: A multi-center quality improvement registry (16 institutions, 26 surgeons) monitoring the safety of ACLr was reviewed. Audit processes using CPT codes were designed to insure that all consecutive cases were prospectively entered on patients <19 years old into a HIPAA-compliant electronic platform. Stiffness was defined as motion loss that prompted any deviation from the normal post-operative course (Clavien Dindo grade II or greater), including additional clinical or physical therapy (PT) visits, serial/dynamic splinting, or secondary surgery for stiffness (Clavien Dindo grade III). Each case of stiffness and associated complication form was secondarily reviewed to insure consistency of identification and grading. Demographic and peri-operative data were reviewed. Chi-Square or Fisher’s exact tests were used for categorical comparisons and a Kruskal-Wallis test for continuous comparisons. RESULTS: 2,839 ACLr cases (mean age 15.1, 6-19; female 46.9%) were identified, with stiffness reported in 4.2% of patients (including isolated flexion or extension and combined stiffness) and secondary surgery for stiffness (manipulation under anesthesia and/or lysis of adhesions) performed in 1.1% of patients. Loss of extension occurred in 3.8% of patients (59.3% females), while loss of flexion occurred in 3.1% of patients (49.4% females). Overall stiffness occurred with longer tourniquet times (93.0 min vs. 78.8 min, p<0.001) when used. Anterior displacement of medial or lateral meniscus tear were associated with nearly twice the incidence of extension loss (7.1%) and three times the incidence of surgery for stiffness (3.7%). CONCLUSION: Post-operative stiffness following ACLr is rare but may be associated with certain demographic and perioperative factors, such as female sex, prolonged tourniquet time, and certain concomitant injuries such as anteriorly displaced meniscus tears. The degree to which altered practices and/or additional monitoring/vigilance in the setting of such factors warrants additional study.
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spelling pubmed-91127722022-05-18 Factors Associated with Stiffness Following Pediatric and Adolescent ACL Reconstruction: Early Results from Score: A Multi-Center Quality Improvement Registry Cooper, Savannah Adsit, Lizzie R. Schmitz, Matthew Ganley, Theodore Ellington, Matthew Rhodes, Jason Frank, Jeremy Mansour, Alfred Saper, Michael Parikh, Shital Mayer, Stephanie Wilson, Philip Shea, Kevin Ellis, Henry B. Orthop J Sports Med Article BACKGROUND: Anterior Cruciate Ligament reconstruction (ACLr) is commonly performed in pediatric and adolescent patients. The most common early complication associated with ACLr is stiffness, including motion loss and arthrofibrosis. There is minimal literature regarding risk factors for stiffness following ACLr in this age group. HYPOTHESIS/PURPOSE: To evaluate the incidence and risk factors associated with stiffness following ACLr using a multi-center quality improvement registry. METHODS: A multi-center quality improvement registry (16 institutions, 26 surgeons) monitoring the safety of ACLr was reviewed. Audit processes using CPT codes were designed to insure that all consecutive cases were prospectively entered on patients <19 years old into a HIPAA-compliant electronic platform. Stiffness was defined as motion loss that prompted any deviation from the normal post-operative course (Clavien Dindo grade II or greater), including additional clinical or physical therapy (PT) visits, serial/dynamic splinting, or secondary surgery for stiffness (Clavien Dindo grade III). Each case of stiffness and associated complication form was secondarily reviewed to insure consistency of identification and grading. Demographic and peri-operative data were reviewed. Chi-Square or Fisher’s exact tests were used for categorical comparisons and a Kruskal-Wallis test for continuous comparisons. RESULTS: 2,839 ACLr cases (mean age 15.1, 6-19; female 46.9%) were identified, with stiffness reported in 4.2% of patients (including isolated flexion or extension and combined stiffness) and secondary surgery for stiffness (manipulation under anesthesia and/or lysis of adhesions) performed in 1.1% of patients. Loss of extension occurred in 3.8% of patients (59.3% females), while loss of flexion occurred in 3.1% of patients (49.4% females). Overall stiffness occurred with longer tourniquet times (93.0 min vs. 78.8 min, p<0.001) when used. Anterior displacement of medial or lateral meniscus tear were associated with nearly twice the incidence of extension loss (7.1%) and three times the incidence of surgery for stiffness (3.7%). CONCLUSION: Post-operative stiffness following ACLr is rare but may be associated with certain demographic and perioperative factors, such as female sex, prolonged tourniquet time, and certain concomitant injuries such as anteriorly displaced meniscus tears. The degree to which altered practices and/or additional monitoring/vigilance in the setting of such factors warrants additional study. SAGE Publications 2022-05-13 /pmc/articles/PMC9112772/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2325967121S00387 Text en © The Author(s) 2022 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
Cooper, Savannah
Adsit, Lizzie R.
Schmitz, Matthew
Ganley, Theodore
Ellington, Matthew
Rhodes, Jason
Frank, Jeremy
Mansour, Alfred
Saper, Michael
Parikh, Shital
Mayer, Stephanie
Wilson, Philip
Shea, Kevin
Ellis, Henry B.
Factors Associated with Stiffness Following Pediatric and Adolescent ACL Reconstruction: Early Results from Score: A Multi-Center Quality Improvement Registry
title Factors Associated with Stiffness Following Pediatric and Adolescent ACL Reconstruction: Early Results from Score: A Multi-Center Quality Improvement Registry
title_full Factors Associated with Stiffness Following Pediatric and Adolescent ACL Reconstruction: Early Results from Score: A Multi-Center Quality Improvement Registry
title_fullStr Factors Associated with Stiffness Following Pediatric and Adolescent ACL Reconstruction: Early Results from Score: A Multi-Center Quality Improvement Registry
title_full_unstemmed Factors Associated with Stiffness Following Pediatric and Adolescent ACL Reconstruction: Early Results from Score: A Multi-Center Quality Improvement Registry
title_short Factors Associated with Stiffness Following Pediatric and Adolescent ACL Reconstruction: Early Results from Score: A Multi-Center Quality Improvement Registry
title_sort factors associated with stiffness following pediatric and adolescent acl reconstruction: early results from score: a multi-center quality improvement registry
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9112772/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2325967121S00387
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