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Comparison of the ACL and ACL graft forces before and after ACL reconstruction: an in-vitro robotic investigation
Authors:Li Guoan  Papannagari Ramprasad  DeFrate Louis E  Yoo Jae Doo  Park Sang Eun  Gill Thomas J
Institution:  a Bioengineering Laboratory, Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Massachusetts General Hospital/Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA b Department of Mechanical Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge, MA, USA c Orthopedic Surgery, Mokdong Hospital, Ewha University, Seoul, Korea d Orthopaedic Surgery, Dongguk University International Hospital, Seoul, Korea
Abstract:Background?Long-term follow-up studies have indi-cated that there is an increased incidence of arthrosis following anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruc-tion, suggesting that the reconstruction may not repro-duce intact ACL biomechanics. We studied not only the magnitude but also the orientation of the ACL and ACL graft forces

Methods?10 knee specimens were tested on a robotic testing system with the ACL intact, deficient, and recon-structed (using a bone-patella tendon-bone graft). The magnitude and orientation of the ACL and ACL graft forces were determined under an anterior tibial load of 130?N at full extension, and 15, 30, 60, and 90° of flexion. Orientation was described using elevation angle (the angle formed with the tibial plateau in the sagit-tal plane) and deviation angle (the angle formed with respect to the anteroposterior direction in the transverse plane)

Results?ACL reconstruction restored anterior tibial translation to within 2.6?mm of that of the intact knee under the 130-N anterior load. Average internal tibial rotation was reduced after ACL reconstruction at all flexion angles. The force vector of the ACL graft was significantly different from the ACL force vector. The average values of the elevation and deviation angles of the ACL graft forces were higher than that of the intact ACL at all flexion angles

Interpretation?Contemporary single bundle ACL reconstruction restores anterior tibial translation under anterior tibial load with different forces (both magni-tude and orientation) in the graft compared to the intact ACL. Such graft function might alter knee kinematics in other degrees of freedom and could overly constrain the tibial rotation. An anatomic ACL reconstruction should reproduce the magnitude and orientation of the intact ACL force vector, so that the 6-degrees-of-freedom knee kinematics and joint reaction forces can be restored.
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