Comparison of femoral tunnel position and knee function in anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction: a retrospective cohort study using measuring-fluoroscopy method versus bony marker method
Yan Dong, Yang Gao, Peng Cui, Yuanming He, Guke Yao

TL;DR
This study compares two methods for femoral tunnel placement in ACL surgery, finding that a measuring-fluoroscopy method improves tunnel positioning and knee function outcomes.
Contribution
The study introduces a measuring-fluoroscopy method that significantly improves femoral tunnel positioning and knee function in ACL reconstruction.
Findings
The measuring-fluoroscopy method achieved an 81.8% good tunnel position rate versus 26.2% with the traditional method.
Patients using the measuring-fluoroscopy method had significantly higher Lysholm and IKDC scores and better knee stability.
KT-1000 side-to-side differences were significantly better in the measuring-fluoroscopy group.
Abstract
Previous studies have shown that surgical technique errors especially the wrong bone tunnel position are the primary reason for the failure of anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction. In this study, we aimed to compare the femoral tunnel position and impact on knee function during the ACL reconstruction using measuring combined with fluoroscopy method and bony marker method for femoral tunnel localization. A retrospective cohort study of patients undergoing ACL reconstruction using the bony marker method or measuring combined with fluoroscopy for femoral tunnel localization was conducted between January 2015 and January 2020. A second arthroscopic exploration was performed more than 1 year after surgery. Data regarding patient demographics, the femoral tunnel position, results of the Lysholm score, the International Knee Documentation Committee (IKDC) score, KT-1000…
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Taxonomy
TopicsKnee injuries and reconstruction techniques · Total Knee Arthroplasty Outcomes · Adhesion, Friction, and Surface Interactions
