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      Biomechanics of the anterior cruciate ligament and implications for surgical reconstruction

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          Abstract

          Injury to the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) is regarded as critical to the physiological kinematics of the femoral-tibial joint, its disruption eventually causing long-term functional impairment. Both the initial trauma and the pathologic motion pattern of the injured knee may result in primary degenerative lesions of the secondary stabilisers of the knee, each of which are associated with the early onset of osteoarthritis. Consequently, there is a wide consensus that young and active patients may profit from reconstructing the ACL. Several factors have been identified as significantly influencing the biomechanical characteristics and the functional outcome of an ACL reconstructed knee joint. These factors are: (1) individual choice of autologous graft material using either patellar tendon-bone grafts or quadrupled hamstring tendon grafts, (2) anatomical bone tunnel placement within the footprints of the native ACL, (3) adequate substitute tension after cyclic graft preconditioning, and (4) graft fixation close to the joint line using biodegradable graft fixation materials that provide an initial fixation strength exceeding those loads commonly expected during rehabilitation. Under observance of these factors, the literature encourages mid-to long-term clinical and functional outcomes after ACL reconstruction.

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          Ligamentous restraints to anterior-posterior drawer in the human knee. A biomechanical study.

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            Biomechanical analysis of human ligament grafts used in knee-ligament repairs and reconstructions.

            Virtually all types of collagenous tissues have been transferred in and around the knee joint for intra-articular and extra-articular ligament reconstructions. However, the mechanical properties (in particular, strength) of such grafts have not been determined in tissues from young adult donors, where age and disuse-related effects have been excluded. To provide this information, we subjected ligament graft tissues to high-strain-rate failure tests to determine their strength and elongation properties. The results were compared with the mechanical properties of anterior cruciate ligaments from a similar young-adult donor population. The study indicated that some graft tissues used in ligament reconstructions are markedly weak and therefore are at risk for elongation and failure at low forces. Grafts utilizing prepatellar retinacular tissues (as in certain anterior-cruciate reconstructions) and others in which a somewhat narrow width of fascia lata or distal iliotibial tract is utilized are included in this at-risk group. Wider grafts from the iliotibial tract or fascia lata would of course proportionally increase ultimate strength. The semitendinosus and gracilis tendons are stronger, having 70 and 49 per cent, respectively, of the initial strength of anterior cruciate ligaments. The bone-patellar tendon-bone graft (fourteen to fifteen millimeters wide, medial or central portion) was the strongest, with a mean strength of 159 to 168 per cent of that of anterior cruciate ligaments. Patellar tendon-bone units, based on grip-to-grip motions, were found to be three to four times stiffer than similarly gripped anterior cruciate ligaments, while gracilis and semitendinosus tendon preparations had values that were nearly identical to those of anterior cruciate ligaments.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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              Anatomy of the anterior cruciate ligament.

              The anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) is a band of dense connective tissue which courses from the femur to the tibia. The ACL is a key structure in the knee joint, as it resists anterior tibial translation and rotational loads. When the knee is extended, the ACL has a mean length of 32 mm and a width of 7-12 mm. There are two components of the ACL, the anteromedial bundle (AMB) and the posterolateral bundle (PLB). They are not isometric with the main change being lengthening of the AMB and shortening of the PLB during flexion. The ACL has a microstructure of collagen bundles of multiple types (mostly type I) and a matrix made of a network of proteins, glycoproteins, elastic systems, and glycosaminoglycans with multiple functional interactions. The complex ultrastructural organization and abundant elastic system of the ACL allow it to withstand multiaxial stresses and varying tensile strains. The ACL is innervated by posterior articular branches of the tibial nerve and is vascularized by branches of the middle genicular artery.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                dargel@dshs-koeln.de
                Journal
                Strategies Trauma Limb Reconstr
                Strategies in Trauma and Limb Reconstruction
                Springer-Verlag (Milan )
                1828-8936
                1828-8928
                April 2007
                : 2
                : 1
                : 1-12
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department for Trauma and Orthopaedic Surgery, Hand and Reconstructive Surgery, St. Vinzenz Hospital, Merheimer Strasse 221-223, D-50733 Cologne, Germany
                [2 ]Department for Sport Traumatology, Institute for Biomechanics and Orthopedics, German Sport University, Cologne, Germany
                [3 ]Institute II for Anatomy, University of Cologne, Cologne, Germany
                Article
                16
                10.1007/s11751-007-0016-6
                2321720
                18427909
                3c83c926-766d-436b-943c-e37c9ef9aca8
                © Springer-Verlag Italia 2007
                History
                : 1 February 2007
                : 15 March 2007
                Categories
                Review
                Custom metadata
                © Springer-Verlag Italia 2007

                Emergency medicine & Trauma
                anterior cruciate ligament,acl reconstruction,graft fixation,graft tension,biomechanics

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