Background:
There is an emerging consensus that increased posterior-inferior directed slope of the subchondral bone portion of the tibial plateau is associated with increased risk of suffering an ...anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury; however, most of what is known about this relationship has come from unmatched case-control studies. These observations need to be confirmed in more rigorously designed investigations.
Hypothesis:
Increased posterior-inferior directed slope of the medial and lateral tibial plateaus are associated with increased risk of suffering a noncontact ACL injury.
Study Design:
Case-control study; Level of evidence, 3.
Methods:
In sum, 176 athletes competing in organized sports at the college and high school levels participated in the study: 88 suffering their first noncontact ACL injury and 88 matched controls. Magnetic resonance images were acquired, and geometry of the subchondral bone portion of the tibial plateau was characterized on each athlete bilaterally by measuring the medial and lateral tibial plateau slopes, coronal tibial slope, and the depth of the medial tibial plateau. Comparisons between knees of the same person were made with paired t tests, and associations with injury risk were assessed by conditional logistic regression analysis of ACL-injured and control participants.
Results:
Controls exhibited side-to-side symmetry of subchondral bone geometry, while the ACL-injured athletes did not, suggesting that the ACL injury may have changed the subchondral bone geometry. Therefore, the uninjured knees of the ACL-injured athletes and the corresponding limbs of their matched controls were used to assess associations with injury risk. Analyses of males and females as a combined group and females as a separate group showed a significant association between ACL injury risk and increased posterior-inferior directed slope of the lateral tibial plateau slope. This relationship was not apparent when males were analyzed as a group. Multivariate analyses indicated that these results were independent of the medial tibial plateau slope, coronal tibial slope, and depth of the medial tibial plateau, which were not associated with ACL injury.
Conclusion:
There is a 21.7% increased risk of noncontact ACL injury with each degree increase of the lateral tibial plateau slope among females but not among males. The medial tibial plateau slope, coronal tibial slope, and depth of the medial tibial plateau were not associated with risk of injury for females or males.
Background:
The morphometric characteristics of the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) and the femoral intercondylar notch within which it resides have been implicated as risk factors for injuries to ...this important stabilizer of the knee. Prior research has produced equivocal results with differing methodologies, and consequently, it is unclear how these characteristics affect the injury risk in male and female patients.
Hypothesis:
The morphometric characteristics of the ACL and femoral intercondylar notch are individually and independently associated with the risk of suffering a noncontact ACL injury, and these relationships are different in male and female patients.
Study Design:
Case-control study; Level of evidence, 3.
Methods:
Magnetic resonance imaging scans of the bilateral knees were obtained on 88 case-control pairs (27 male, 61 female) matched for age, sex, and participation on the same sports team. Patients had suffered a grade III, first-time, noncontact ACL tear. The femoral notch width at 4 locations, the thickness of the bony ridge at the anteromedial outlet of the femoral notch, the femoral notch volume, ACL volume, and ACL cross-sectional area were measured.
Results:
Multivariate analysis of combined data from male and female patients revealed that decreased ACL volume (odds ratio OR, 0.829), decreased femoral notch width (OR, 0.700), and increased bony ridge thickness at the anteromedial outlet of the femoral notch (OR, 1.614) were significant independent predictors of an ACL injury. Separate analyses of male and female patients indicated that the femoral notch ridge may be more strongly associated with a risk in female patients, while ACL volume is more strongly associated with a risk in male patients. However, statistical analysis performed with an adjustment for body weight strengthened the association between ACL volume and the risk of injuries in female patients.
Conclusion:
Morphometric features of both the ACL and femoral notch combine to influence the risk of suffering a noncontact ACL injury. When included together in a multivariate model that adjusts for body weight, the effects of the morphometric measurements are similar in male and female patients. If body weight is not taken into consideration, ACL volume is not associated with a risk in female patients.
Background:
Anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) trauma and ACL reconstruction (ACLR) are associated with the loss of strength and function of the muscles that span the knee joint. The underlying ...mechanism associated with this is not completely understood.
Purpose:
To determine whether the duration of tourniquet use during ACLR has an effect on knee extensor muscle contractile function and size at the cellular (ie, fiber) level 3 weeks after surgery and at the whole-muscle level at 6 months after surgery.
Study Design:
Descriptive laboratory study and case series; Level of evidence, 4.
Methods:
Study participants sustained an acute, first-time ACL injury. All participants underwent ACLR with the use of a tourniquet placed in a standardized location on the thigh; the tourniquet was inflated (pressure range, 250-275 mm Hg), and the time of tourniquet use during surgery was documented. Participants were evaluated 1 week before surgery (to measure patient function, strength, and subjective outcome with the Knee injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score KOOS and International Knee Documentation Committee IKDC score), at 3 weeks after ACLR surgery (to obtain muscle biopsy specimens of the vastus lateralis and assess muscle fiber cross-sectional area, contractile function, and mitochondrial content and morphometry), and at 6 months after ACLR (to evaluate patient function, strength, and subjective outcomes via KOOS and IKDC scores). Data were acquired on both the injured/surgical limb and the contralateral, normal side to facilitate the use of a within-subjects study design. Results are based on additional analysis of data acquired from previous research that had common entry criteria, treatments, and follow-up protocols.
Results:
At 3 weeks after ACLR, the duration of tourniquet use at the time of surgery did not explain the variation in single–muscle fiber contractile function or cross-sectional area (myosin heavy chain MHC I and II fibers) or subsarcolemmal and intermyofibrillar mitochondrial content or morphometry. At 6 months after ACLR, the duration of tourniquet use was not associated with the peak isometric and isokinetic torque measurements, patient function, or patient-reported outcomes.
Conclusion:
The duration of tourniquet use at the time of ACLR surgery did not explain variation in muscle fiber size, contractile function, or mitochondrial content at 3 weeks after surgery or strength of the quadriceps musculature or patient-reported function or quality of life at 6-month follow-up.
Treatment for breast cancer has increased patient survivorship exponentially over the past few decades. With increased survivorship, more women are living with the longstanding effects of breast ...cancer treatment, such as lymphedema. Patients, health care providers, and payers depend on practical and efficient clinical measures to accurately diagnose and monitor disease progression or regression. However, current clinical measures do not include objective measures that assess lymphedetamous tissue accurately. This study compared current measures to a novel use of ultrasound (US) imaging to quantify tissue texture.
Seventeen women diagnosed with lymphedema completed self-report questionnaires and then were tested twice by two lymphedema physical therapists who measured edema, fibrosis, and limb volume differences. One therapist measured subjects' limbs using US imaging and derived measures of entropy and average pixel intensity. Volume measures were consistent between therapists (p < 0.01) but palpation was not (0.01 < p < 0.72). Therapists' measures correlated better to subjects' self-report of edema (0.01 < p > 0.32) as compared to fibrosis (0.23 < p > 0.90). US measures were reliable (Cronbachs's α = 0.7 and 0.91 for entropy and API, respectively). Entropy measures demonstrated significant differences between subjects' involved versus uninvolved forearms (p = 0.03).
Therapists were not consistent with each other when rating edema or fibrosis; however, they were consistent when measuring limb volume differences. US measures (entropy) demonstrated a significant difference between involved and uninvolved. US imaging, as a tool to quantify subcutaneous tissues, holds promise to be a safe, mobile, and effective method to measure lymphedema tissue texture.
Anterior cruciate ligament injury and reconstruction (ACLR) affects articular cartilage thickness profiles about the tibial, femoral, and patellar surfaces; however, it's unclear whether the ...magnitudes of change in cartilage thickness, as well as the locations and areas over which these changes occur, differ between males and females. This is important to consider as differences exist between the sexes with regard to knee biomechanics, patellofemoral pain, and anatomic alignment, which influence risk of an index and repeated injury. Subjects underwent ACLR with a bone‐patella tendon‐bone autograft. At 4‐year follow‐up, they had asymptomatic knees; however, significant ACL injured‐to‐contralateral normal knee differences in articular cartilage thickness values were observed. Both thickening and thinning of cartilage occurred about the tibiofemoral and patellofemoral joints, relative to matched control subjects with normal knees. Further, the location of the areas and magnitudes of thickening and thinning were different between females and males. Thickening (swelling) of articular cartilage is an early finding associated with the onset of posttraumatic osteoarthritis (PTOA). Therefore, the increases in cartilage thickness that were observed in this cohort may represent early signs of the onset of PTOA that occur prior to the patient developing symptoms and radiographic evidence of this disease. The different locations of areas that underwent a change in cartilage thicknesses between males and females suggest that each sex responds differently to knee ligament trauma, reconstruction, rehabilitation, and return to activity, and indicates that sex‐specific analysis should be utilized in studies of PTOA.
To compare whether online journaling improved 6 month outcomes for pain (Numeric Pain Rating Scale NPRS), function (Oswestry Disability Index ODI), and EA rates for subjects (age 18-55 years) with ...LBP. Subjects completed the ODI and the NPRS at pre-treatment, and 7 weeks and 6 months post-treatment initiation. Following 6 weekly PT treatments, one group (Web group WG; n=20) was discharged with a HEP and online journal to record, daily for 6 months, the number of exercise repetitions done for the prescribed HEP and their pre- and post-exercise pain. There were no significant group mean differences in the NPRS or ODI scores (P = 0.37, P = 0.73, respectively) across the three time points. However, there was a significant decrease from pre- to post- treatment in NPRS mean (P = 0.0009) and in ODI mean (P <0.0001), but no significant mean differences from post-treatment to 6 months for either measure.