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Magnetic Resonance Imaging and Functional Performance Outcome After ACL Repair With Internal Brace Technique

Completed
Conditions
Anterior Cruciate Ligament Tear
Registration Number
NCT02760589
Lead Sponsor
AUVA
Brief Summary

The purpose of the study is a clinical evaluation with special regard to magnetic resonance imaging and functional performance at least one year after injury / surgery in all three groups (subjects who underwent InternalBrace surgery, subjects who underwent surgery with a semitendinosus graft and subjects who were treated conservatively).

Detailed Description

Lesions of the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) are the most common ligamentous injuries with an increasing incidence. 77% of ACL insufficient knees result in moderate to high physical limitations. Different surgical treatments have been described. ACL reconstruction with either a semitendinosus or patella tendon graft is regarded as the gold standard of operative therapy. Despite numerous studies representing good and excellent outcome after ACL reconstruction, a recent Meta-analysis of Biau et al. 2006 revealed that only 40% of patients gain full functional recovery.

Since the native ACL is considered to be an important factor for the proprioceptive sensation, a removal during the reconstruction might have an adverse influence on muscular stabilisation, rehabilitation and functional performance of the knee joint. Thus a primary repair of the native ACL seems reasonable.

For tears of the anterior cruciate ligament near the femoral attachment a new method of surgical treatment can be applied. The InternalBrace method by Arthrex is performed arthroscopically and involves reattaching of the ACL that has avulsed off the femoral wall using a FiberTape by Arthrex. To the authors knowledge the augmentation with FiberTape by Arthrex has not been systematically evaluated. Promising results have been presented recently using a comparable method, which showed a high patient satisfaction, faster rehabilitation and a high rate of return to pre-injury sports level.

To assess the functional performance, a further aim of the study is to develop a new test battery consisting of strength tests and single-leg hop tests with the ability to distinguish between the functional performance of the injured and the uninjured leg in patients with ACL deficiency. Test batteries consisting of several hop tests has been described in the previous literature indicating a good test-retest reliability measuring lower leg performance. The functional performance is defined using the limb symmetry index in percent between each individuals lower limbs. This study aims to determine the LSI of healthy subjects using the values achieved by the subjects in the control group. A limb symmetry index (LSI) between 85% and 95% is considered sufficient for return to pivoting sports in patients after knee injury.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
92
Inclusion Criteria
  • Female and male subjects
  • Age between 18 and 60 years
  • Patients who sustained an isolated rupture of the anterior cruciate ligament at least 12 month after injury (for the subjects who received conservative therapy), respectively surgery (for the two groups in which subjects underwent surgery)
  • MRI-confirmed tear of the anterior cruciate ligament near the femoral attachment
  • Surgical treatment of the InternalBrace group must have been performed within the first six weeks after injury
  • Women of reproductive age
  • Confirmed written consent of each subject
Exclusion Criteria
  • Injury to the other knee
  • Previous knee injuries which required treatment
  • Concomitant injuries such as fractures, articular cartilage lesions reaching subchondral bone, meniscal tears or lesions of the collateral ligaments which required an additional surgical intervention and therefore an extended post-op rehabilitation protocol
  • Pregnant and nursing women
  • Claustrophobia
  • Existing contraindication against performing an MRI scan
  • Taking certain concomitant medication(s) (especially cortisone), or conditions that interfere with a patient's ability to comply with all procedures
  • Circumstances that interfere with the participant's ability to give informed consent (diminished understanding or comprehension, or a language other than German or English spoken

Study & Design

Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Study Design
Not specified
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Signal Intensity in Magnetic resonance Imagingat least one year after injury

The integration of the ligament in magnetic resonance imaging is represented by using values from 1 to 3 (1= continuous ligament; 2= wavy but continuous ligament contour; 3= non-delineated ligament) which are determined by an experienced independent radiologist. Source of the data: axial, coronal, and sagittal scans with proton density-weighted sequences with and without fat saturation by a 1.5-Tesla MRI unit (1.5-Tesla MRI unit, Espree; Siemens AG, Erlangen, Germany).

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Limb symmetry Indexat least one year after Injury / surgery

The functional performance is defined using the LSI in percent between each individual's lower limbs using a diagnostic battery. The test battery consists of a standardized warm-up protocol followed by an isometric strength test (testing the maximum voluntary isometric contraction) of the hamstrings in prone position in 90 degree knee flexion using a portable dynamometer (Mecmesin Advanced Force Gauge, Mecmesin, UK), which is attached to a wall bar with a non-stretchable rope. After that several single-leg jump tests are performed: (1) single-leg hop for distance, (2) single-leg 6m timed hop, (3) single-leg triple crossover hop for distance and (4) side hop test. Finally, a fatigued single-leg hop for distance is conducted following a fatigue protocol consisting of alternating squat lunges to exhaustion for the duration of two minutes. The LSI will be calculated for the best trial in each of the five hop tests and for the overall combination as an average of the hop tests.

Subjective Outcome: German Version of the IKDC Subjective Knee Form (International Knee Documentation Committeeat least one year after Injury

Source of the data: knee evaluation form Results: continuous data between 0 and 100

Subjective Outcome: German Version of the WOMAC (Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Arthritis Indexat least one year after Injury

Source of the data: 5-point Likert-type of a subjective patient questionnaire of 24 items divided into 3 subscales (pain: 5 items, stiffness: 2 items, physical function: 17 items) Result: ordinal data (pain=0-20, stiffness=0-8, physical function=0-68)

Subjective Outcome: SF-12 (short form)at least one year after Injury

Source of the data: 5-point Likert-type of a subjective patient questionnaire of 12 items Result: continuous data between 0 and 100 (the higher the number, the better the subjective physical and mental health)

Subjective Outcome: German Version of the KOOS (Knee Osteoarthritis Outcome Score)at least one year after Injury

Source of the data: patient-administered subjective questionnaire of 5 subscales: Pain, other Symptoms, Function in daily living (ADL), Function in sport and recreation (Sport/Rec) and knee related Quality of life (QOL) What form the data will take: a normalized score (100 indicating no symptoms and 0 indicating extreme symptoms) is calculated for each subscale.

Subjective Outcome: German Version of the modified Lysholm-Score by Lysholm and Gillquistat least one year after Injury

Source of the data: 8-item patient-administered questionnaire Result: continuous data between 0 and 100

Subjective Outcome: German Version of the TAS (Tegner activity scale)at least one year after Injury

The physical activity level of all subjects in all groups is estimated with the German Version of the TAS (Tegner activity scale).

Source of the data: patient questionnaire Result: ordinal data between 0 and 10

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Traumacenter Linz

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Linz, Upper Austria, Austria

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