Number of intra-operative cyclic knee motion required to achieve stable graft tension in anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction; a prospective clinical study
Manato Horii, Ryuichiro Akagi, Shotaro Watanabe, Takahiro Enomoto, Hiroaki Hosokawa, Seiji Ohtori, Takahisa Sasho

TL;DR
This study finds that three sets of 10 knee motion cycles during ACL surgery help maintain graft tension, reducing initial tension loss.
Contribution
The study determines the number of cyclic knee motions needed to achieve stable graft tension in double-bundle ACL reconstruction.
Findings
Three sets of 10 knee motion cycles reduce initial tension loss in hamstring autografts.
Graft tension changes significantly decrease after repeated cycles of knee motion.
No correlation was found between graft tension changes and age, sex, or graft diameter.
Abstract
Applying pretension by cyclic knee motion immediately before graft fixation in anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction surgery decreases graft elongation during the postoperative course. However, the expected change in graft tension caused by cyclic knee motion remains unclear. We measured graft tension changes caused by cyclic knee motion during double-bundle ACL reconstruction. We included 39 patients undergoing primary anatomical double-bundle ACL reconstruction with autologous hamstrings as graft sources, at multiple centers between February 2021 and August 2022. After securing the anteromedial (AM) and posterolateral (PL) bundle grafts to the femoral cortex, they were initially tensioned to 40 N per bundle. After 10 cycles of knee extension and flexion motion, ranging from 0 to 90–110°, tension was re-measured and re-tensioned to 40 N if the graft tension had decreased.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsKnee injuries and reconstruction techniques · Total Knee Arthroplasty Outcomes · Sports injuries and prevention
