Predictors of Complications after Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injury
Abstract
BACKGROUND: An anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) tear is a serious knee injury that frequently affects young individuals active in soccer, alpine skiing, handball and basketball. Regardless of treatment, an ACL injury is associated with an increased risk of complications in the short and long term, such as meniscal and chondral injuries or a need to undergo surgery on the injured knee or the contralateral knee. In order to prevent these complications, the essential first step is to obtain knowledge of factors that make certain individuals susceptible to certain complications. AIM: The aim of this thesis was to investigate patient- and health care-related factors and identify predictors of meniscal injury, chondral injury, revision surgery and contralateral ACL reconstruction. METHODS: This thesis is based on six studies. Studies I-III are systematic reviews of randomized controlled trials and cohort studies. Studies IV-VI are registry-based cohort studies of patients in the Swedish National Knee Ligament Register. RESULTS: Individuals with an ACL injury who underwent non-surgical treatment ran a more than 10 times higher risk of sustaining meniscal injuries and an at least 4 times higher risk of requiring meniscal surgery compared with individuals who underwent ACL reconstruction. Adolescents (individuals aged 13 to 19 years) who underwent ACL reconstruction ran a 2 to 3 times higher risk of revision surgery or contralateral ACL reconstruction. Adolescents who suffered an ACL injury while playing soccer ran a 3 times higher risk of revision surgery. Females who underwent ACL reconstruction with harvest of a contralateral hamstring tendon autograft ran a more than 3 times higher risk of future contralateral ACL reconstruction. CONCLUSIONS: Non-surgical treatment, age 13 to 19 years, injury during soccer and contralateral hamstring tendon harvest were predictors of serious complications after ACL injury.
Parts of work
I. Andersson D, Samuelsson K, Karlsson J. Treatment of anterior cruciate ligament injuries with special reference to surgical technique and rehabilitation: an assessment of randomized controlled trials. Arthroscopy. 2009;25(6):653-685. ::PMID::19501297 II. Samuelsson K, Andersson D, Karlsson J. Treatment of anterior cruciate ligament injuries with special reference to graft type and surgical technique: an assessment of randomized controlled trials. Arthroscopy. 2009;25(10):1139-1174. ::PMID::19801293 III. Andernord D, Karlsson J, Musahl V, Bhandari M, Fu FH, Samuelsson K. Timing of surgery of the anterior cruciate ligament. Arthroscopy. 2013;29(11):1863-1871. ::PMID::24053890 IV. Andernord D, Björnsson H, Petzold M, Eriksson BI, Forssblad M, Karlsson J, Samuelsson K. Surgical predictors of early revision surgery after anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction: results from the Swedish national knee ligament register on 13,102 patients. The American Journal of Sports Medicine. 2014;42(7):1574-1582. ::PMID::24778266 V. Andernord D, Desai N, Björnsson H, Ylander M, Karlsson J, Samuelsson K. Patient predictors of early revision surgery after anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction: a cohort study of 16,930 patients with 2-year follow-up. The American Journal of Sports Medicine. 2015;43(1):121-127. ::PMID::25325560 VI. Andernord D, Desai N, Björnsson H, Gillén S, Karlsson J, Samuelsson K. Predictors of contralateral anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction: a cohort study of 9061 patients with 5-year follow-up.The American Journal of Sports Medicine. 2015;43(2):295-302. ::PMID::25384505
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy (Medicine)
University
University of Gothenburg. Sahlgrenska Academy
Institution
Institute of Clincial Sciences. Department of Orthopaedics
Disputation
Torsdagen den 30 april 2015, kl. 9.00, Hörsal Arvid Carlsson, Academicum, Medicinaregatan 3
Date of defence
2015-04-30
Date
2015-04-10Author
Andernord, Daniel
Keywords
Sports Medicine
Knee
Joint
Menisci
Cartilage
Rehabilitation
Sex
Adolescent
Teenager
Football
Evidence-based medicine
Osteoarthritis
Arthroscopy
Physical therapy
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-628-9296-8 (printed)
978-91-628-9297-5 (e-published)
Language
eng