Acromioclavicular Reconstruction Using the Lockdown Technique: A Case Series and Systematic Review
Krisztian Kovacs, Szilárd Váncsa, Zsolt Abonyi-Tóth, Peter Hegyi, Gergely Soos, Kalman Rabai, Tibor Bogosi, Gyorgy Kocsis

TL;DR
This study evaluates a new surgical technique called Lockdown for treating shoulder dislocations, showing improved function and pain reduction, especially in acute cases.
Contribution
The study introduces and evaluates the Lockdown procedure, a synthetic ligament technique for AC joint stabilization, with both clinical and systematic review data.
Findings
Significant functional improvements and pain reduction were observed, particularly in acute dislocations.
The Lockdown procedure had a 30.8% complication rate, mostly minor infections.
Systematic review showed similar complication rates and 5.4% implant removal due to failure.
Abstract
Background: Acromioclavicular (AC) joint dislocations are frequent, especially kocsisamong young male athletes. While over 150 surgical techniques exist, consensus on optimal treatment—particularly for Rockwood type III injuries—remains elusive. This study evaluates the Lockdown procedure’s efficacy, safety, and patient satisfaction, a synthetic ligament technique for AC joint stabilization. Methods: A multicenter prospective study was conducted on 39 patients across three Hungarian hospitals (2018–2023). Outcomes included shoulder function, pain levels, and complication rates, with subgroup analysis of acute (≤3 weeks) versus chronic (>3 weeks) cases. A systematic review of nine studies (205 cases) was also performed to assess broader outcomes and complications. Results: Significant improvements were observed in functional scores (OSS, Constant, DASH, SST, ASES, Nottingham, Imitani)…
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Taxonomy
TopicsShoulder and Clavicle Injuries · Shoulder Injury and Treatment · Trauma Management and Diagnosis
