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Should proximal ruptures of the anterior rectus femoris muscle be treated surgically?

PURPOSE: No therapeutic consensus has been established about proximal ruptures of the rectus femoris muscle. The objective of this literature review is to determine a therapeutic course of action. METHODS: We conducted a literature review on the PubMed database using the following keywords (in Frenc...

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Autores principales: Choufani, Camille, Khiami, Frédéric, Barbier, Olivier
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9252935/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34903464
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cjtee.2021.11.004
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author Choufani, Camille
Khiami, Frédéric
Barbier, Olivier
author_facet Choufani, Camille
Khiami, Frédéric
Barbier, Olivier
author_sort Choufani, Camille
collection PubMed
description PURPOSE: No therapeutic consensus has been established about proximal ruptures of the rectus femoris muscle. The objective of this literature review is to determine a therapeutic course of action. METHODS: We conducted a literature review on the PubMed database using the following keywords (in French and English, respectively): "quadriceps/quadriceps", "droit antérieur/rectus femoris", "proximal/proximal", "chirurgie/surgical", "avulsion/avulsion". We collected 266 articles, 36 of them were selected, which were related to our topic: proximal rupture of the anterior rectus femoris. Patients with a proximal rupture of the rectus femoris, minor or major patient of traumatic origin were included in this study. Patients injured at another lesion level, or non-traumatic lesions of the proximal rectus femoris (tendinitis without ruptures, tumor or others) were excluded. For each patient, the indications, the type of treatment and the functional result were analyzed, with the time to recovery and the level of recovery from sports and professional activities (same sport/profession or not, same level or not) as the main criterion of judgment. Fisher exact test was used for statistical comparison. RESULTS: The aims of conservative treatment are to be pain free for the patient, to fight hematoma and to rehabilitate the injury as quickly as possible. The surgical techniques are varied, with most consisting of either a reinsertion of the musculo-tendon stump or a resection of the scar tissue with myo-tendino-aponeurotic suture in place. The functional results are good for the majority of the treatments proposed, but the conservative treatment has a shorter recovery time (3 months vs. 4 months for the best surgical results). Highly displaced bone avulsion is the only indication for first-line surgical treatment. CONSLUSION: The main disadvantage of conservative treatment is the risk of residual pain beyond 3 months (10%), justifying an MRI to guide secondary surgical treatment. We propose a treatment plan for proximal rupture of the proximal rectus femoris rupture.
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spelling pubmed-92529352022-07-06 Should proximal ruptures of the anterior rectus femoris muscle be treated surgically? Choufani, Camille Khiami, Frédéric Barbier, Olivier Chin J Traumatol Original Article PURPOSE: No therapeutic consensus has been established about proximal ruptures of the rectus femoris muscle. The objective of this literature review is to determine a therapeutic course of action. METHODS: We conducted a literature review on the PubMed database using the following keywords (in French and English, respectively): "quadriceps/quadriceps", "droit antérieur/rectus femoris", "proximal/proximal", "chirurgie/surgical", "avulsion/avulsion". We collected 266 articles, 36 of them were selected, which were related to our topic: proximal rupture of the anterior rectus femoris. Patients with a proximal rupture of the rectus femoris, minor or major patient of traumatic origin were included in this study. Patients injured at another lesion level, or non-traumatic lesions of the proximal rectus femoris (tendinitis without ruptures, tumor or others) were excluded. For each patient, the indications, the type of treatment and the functional result were analyzed, with the time to recovery and the level of recovery from sports and professional activities (same sport/profession or not, same level or not) as the main criterion of judgment. Fisher exact test was used for statistical comparison. RESULTS: The aims of conservative treatment are to be pain free for the patient, to fight hematoma and to rehabilitate the injury as quickly as possible. The surgical techniques are varied, with most consisting of either a reinsertion of the musculo-tendon stump or a resection of the scar tissue with myo-tendino-aponeurotic suture in place. The functional results are good for the majority of the treatments proposed, but the conservative treatment has a shorter recovery time (3 months vs. 4 months for the best surgical results). Highly displaced bone avulsion is the only indication for first-line surgical treatment. CONSLUSION: The main disadvantage of conservative treatment is the risk of residual pain beyond 3 months (10%), justifying an MRI to guide secondary surgical treatment. We propose a treatment plan for proximal rupture of the proximal rectus femoris rupture. Elsevier 2022-07 2021-11-20 /pmc/articles/PMC9252935/ /pubmed/34903464 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cjtee.2021.11.004 Text en © 2021 Chinese Medical Association. Production and hosting by Elsevier B.V. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Original Article
Choufani, Camille
Khiami, Frédéric
Barbier, Olivier
Should proximal ruptures of the anterior rectus femoris muscle be treated surgically?
title Should proximal ruptures of the anterior rectus femoris muscle be treated surgically?
title_full Should proximal ruptures of the anterior rectus femoris muscle be treated surgically?
title_fullStr Should proximal ruptures of the anterior rectus femoris muscle be treated surgically?
title_full_unstemmed Should proximal ruptures of the anterior rectus femoris muscle be treated surgically?
title_short Should proximal ruptures of the anterior rectus femoris muscle be treated surgically?
title_sort should proximal ruptures of the anterior rectus femoris muscle be treated surgically?
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9252935/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34903464
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cjtee.2021.11.004
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