
Different injury patterns exist among patients undergoing operative treatment of isolated PCL, combined PCL/ACL, and isolated ACL injuries: a study from the Swedish National Knee Ligament Registry
Author(s) -
Zsidai Bálint,
Horvath Alexandra,
Winkler Philipp W.,
Narup Eric,
Kaarre Janina,
Svantesson Eleonor,
Musahl Volker,
Hamrin Senorski Eric,
Samuelsson Kristian
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
knee surgery, sports traumatology, arthroscopy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.806
H-Index - 125
eISSN - 1433-7347
pISSN - 0942-2056
DOI - 10.1007/s00167-022-06948-x
Subject(s) - medicine , anterior cruciate ligament , posterior cruciate ligament , concomitant , acl injury , surgery , patellar ligament , ligament , patellar tendon
Purpose To compare demographic characteristics and concomitant injury patterns in patients undergoing primary isolated posterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (PCL‐R) and combined posterior cruciate ligament (PCL) and anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction (PCL‐R/ACL‐R) with isolated ACL reconstruction (ACL‐R) as a reference using data from the Swedish National Knee Ligament Registry (SNKLR). Methods This cohort study based on the SNKLR comprised patients undergoing either PCL‐R, ACL‐R, or combined PCL‐R/ACL‐R between January 1, 2005 and December 31, 2019 in Sweden. Demographic and surgery‐related data with regards to injury mechanism, concomitant intraarticular lesions and their treatment, neurovascular damage, and concomitant ligamentous injuries were extracted. Exclusion criteria included concomitant fractures of the femur, fibula, patella or tibia, and quadriceps or patellar tendon injury. Results A total of 45,564 patients were included in this study. Isolated PCL‐R, combined PCL‐R/ACL‐R, and isolated ACL‐R were performed in 192 (0.4%), 203 (0.5%) and 45,169 (99.1%) patients, respectively. Sports were identified as the cause of 64% of PCL‐Rs, 54% of PCL‐R/ACL‐Rs, and 89% of ACL‐Rs, while a traffic‐related mechanism was identified in 20% of PCL‐Rs, 27% of PCL‐R/ACL‐Rs and 2% of ACL‐Rs. Meniscus injury prevalence was 45% in ACL‐Rs, 31% in PCL‐R/ACL‐Rs and 16% in isolated PCL‐Rs ( p < 0.001). Cartilage injuries were more common in PCL‐R (37%) and PCL‐R/ACL‐R patients (40%) compared to ACL‐R patients (26%, p < 0.001). Concomitant knee ligament injury was identified in 28–44% of PCL‐R/ACL‐R patients. Neurovascular injuries were present in 9% of PCL‐R/ACL‐Rs, 1% of PCL‐Rs, and 0.3% of ACL‐Rs ( p < 0.001). Conclusion Differences in injury mechanisms among patient groups confirm that operatively treated PCL tears are frequently caused by both traffic and sports. Cartilage and ligament injuries were more frequent in patients with PCL‐R compared to ACL‐R. Consequently, combined PCL and ACL tears should raise suspicion for concomitant knee lesions with clinical relevance during the operative treatment of these complex injuries. Level of evidence III.