5/31/15 The Problem Surgical Treatment of ACL Tears Optimizing Femoral Tunnel Positioning • ACL footprint area is 3.5 x the size of the midsubstance of the ACL Andrew D. Pearle, MD • 5 mm slot between notch and PCL thru which ACL must fit – Harner Arthroscopy 1999 • Proximal ACL is flat (9-16 mm x 2-4mm) – Siebold KSSTA 2014 Associate Attending Orthopedic Surgeon Sports Medicine and Shoulder Service Hospital for Special Surgery Director, HSS CAS Center – Triantafyllidi Arthroscopy 2013 • Discrepancy between size and shape of femoral footprint and midsubstance of the ACL Life is full of Compromises… • ACL footprint area is 3.5 x the size of the midsubstance of the ACL – Harner Arthroscopy 1999 Every Decade We Change Our Minds The Journey Around the Notch… • 1980s – Isometric • 1990s • 10mm tunnel - area 79 mm2 • Femoral footprint area ranges 85-200 mm2 – Transtibial • 2000s – Kopf KSSTA 2009 – Anatomic • Can’t fill the footprint – Must be strategic!! • 2015 and beyond – IDEAL?? 50 years ago.. Isometric concept Definitions Ridge • 1960s - full range of knee motion can be achieved without causing ligament elongation and plastic deformation • 1974- Artmann & Wirth- found “the isometric point” 1 5/31/15 The Drift Up the wall… 1990s – Transtibial Endoscopic Optimizing Isometry Guided Tunnel Positioning in 1980s Hefzy, Grood & Noyes Use of an Endoscopic Aimer for Femoral Tunnel Placement in Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction David A. McGuire, M.D., Stephen D. Hendricks, and Geri L. Grinstead, Ph.D. Arthroscopy 1996 Definitive Landmarks for Reproducible Tibial Tunnel Placement in Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction Craig D. Morgan, M.D., Victor R. Kalman, D.O., and Daniel M. Grawl, P.A.C. Arthroscopy 1995 • • Transtibial Results Often Impressive • Overall satisfactory outcomes – Harner JBJS 2000 – 75-90% good and excellent results Center of tunnel at “over the top” position 6-8 mm anterior to the truck back wall, extreme post cortex; at the junction of the roof & the lateral wall of the femoral intercondylar notch, resulting in a 1-2 mm proximal cortical margin (back wall thickness) Dynamic kinematic evaluation Concerns led to reevaluation of tunnel position • Logan (Vertically open MRI) AJSM 04 • Tashman, Anderson AJSM 04 • Tashman CORR 07 • Gill, Li AJSM 06 • Chouliaras Geogoulis AJSM 07 – After ACL reconstruction, lateral tibial plateau displaced anteriorly relative to the femur by 5 mm – Abnormal rotational knee motion during running after ACL reconstruction – Reconstructed knee more ER and adducted – ACL reconstruction failed to restore normal rotational knee kinematics during dynamic loading and some degradation of graft function occurred – Anterior translation of reconstructed knee compared to intact (3mm) – Increased ER beyong 30 degrees flexion – Sig increased tibial rotation compared with controls Standard ACL reconstruction fails to restore normal knee kinematics Biomechanical Data • • • • 30 trans2bial ACL Femoral socket too high and outside femoral footprint Above the ridge • • • • • Lim et al. Clin Orthop Surg 2012 Driscoll, Noble et al. Arthroscopy 2012 Debandi, Fu et al. Arthroscopy 2012 Kondo, Amis et al. AJSM 2011 Bedi et al. Arthroscopy 2011 Placing the graft in the center of the footprint restores AP and rotational stability more than vertical nonanatomic grafts 2 5/31/15 Concerns The Drift Down… Higher forces on graft with lower position • Anatomic Approach – Fill the footprint or… – CENTRALIZE within the footprint – Avoid high Nonanatomic position Did we take it too far? Too Low on the Wall? Clinical Outcomes Clinical Outcomes AM 5.6% TT 3.2% Journal of Arthroscopy Jan 2013 • 2 incision technique 1980s • Transtibial endoscopic 1990s • AM portal anatomic 2000s • 9,239 ACLR’s from Danish Knee Ligament Registry • 1945 AM and 6430 TT Primary ACLR’s The Anatomy Re-‐Revisited Footprint fibers are not all created equally! Histology Direct and Indirect types of ACL fiber insertions • Flat insertion; Not 2 bundles • Stout band of fibers at the ridge with wispy posterior extension Direct Indirect 3 5/31/15 High (Direct) ACL Footprint Insertion – At the ridge – Posterior to direct insertion blending with posterior articular cartilage. – Direct insertion of ACL fibers histologic – Simpler ultrastructure – More robust fibers macroscopically Low (indirect) ACL Footprint Insertion Fan like expanse of fibers – Ligament directly anchors to bone without transition zone (sMCL) – Strength theoretically weaker than direct – “Ideal to make the femoral tunnel at the direct insertion” Biomechanically not proven Biomechanical Study (Pearle et al) Or Within Anatomic Region of ACL femoral footprint: High ACL Fibers Inserting on the ‘Ridge’ -‐ Carry the Greatest Loads (80%) during stability exam -‐ Are Most Isometric during ROM Summary There and Back Again Conclusion • We were There!! AMB PLB It would appear wise to avoid going too low on the wall when performing anatomic AM portal ACLR Our data suggests that femoral tunnel placement encroaching on the ridge may be a good idea 4 5/31/15 Summary There and Back Again Summary There and Back Again • We were There!! • We were There!! • Transtibial approach • Transtibial approach – Drifter into nonanatomic high position – Vertical graft, recurrent pivot • Anatomic approach – Drifter into non-isometric low position – increased tension on graft, higher clinical failure • Functional approach – Reconstruction most functional and isometric region of ACL – Back again to the Sweet Spot!! Summary There and Back Again • We were There!! • Transtibial approach – Drifter into nonanatomic high position – Vertical graft, recurrent pivot • Anatomic approach – Drifter into non-isometric low position – increased tension on graft, higher clinical failure • Functional approach – Reconstruction of most functional and isometric region of the ACL footprint – Back again to the Sweet Spot!! I.D.E.A.L Femoral Tunnel Position – Drifter into nonanatomic high position – Vertical graft, recurrent pivot • Anatomic approach – Drifter into non-isometric low position – increased tension on graft, higher clinical failure • Functional approach – Reconstruction most functional and isometric region of ACL – Back again to the Sweet Spot!! Recommended Position Based on Anatomic, Histologic, and Biomechanical Data – Tunnel should encroach on ridge!! – Anatomic but in the most “functional” portion of the footprint – Covers the direct fibers – Optimizes isometry (minimizes tension on graft during ROM) – Time-honored approach Thank You • Isometric • Direct Insertion • Eccentrically located in footprint – Encroaching the ridge • Anatomic – In most functional portion of footprint • Low Tension throughout ROM 5
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