Biomechanical testing of lateral and medial ligament reconstruction using bone anchors with autologous resident tissue: influence of different reconstruction techniques on stability and mobility
Lea Marie Keßling, Anna Altemeier, Dennis Nebel, Sarah Ettinger, Kiriakos Daniilidis, Christian Plaaß, Christina Stukenborg-Colsman, Leif Claaßen

TL;DR
This study compared surgical techniques for ankle instability, finding that both open and arthroscopic methods effectively stabilize the ankle, with additional medial support offering extra benefits.
Contribution
The study introduces a biomechanical comparison of open and arthroscopic techniques for ankle ligament repair, including the effect of medial ligament stabilization.
Findings
Refixation of the ATFL and CFL significantly reduced anterior translation, internal rotation, and supination laxities.
Additional MCL repair further reduced external rotation and pronation laxity.
Open and arthroscopic techniques showed comparable stabilization for lateral ligament repair.
Abstract
The optimal surgical technique for chronic ankle instability remains disputable. This study had two main questions: the effect of additional medial collateral ligament (MCL) stabilisation in ankle instability and comparison of open and arthroscopic surgical techniques for lateral ligament repair. We used 10 fresh-frozen cadaver feet (Science Care, Phoenix, AZ, USA) per group. Eight states were tested in an open surgery group: native; MCL cut; MCL repair; anterior talofibular ligament (ATFL) cut; calcaneofibular ligament (CFL) cut; MCL re-cut + ATFL repair; MCL re-cut + AFTL and CFL repair; and MCL, ATFL, and CFL repair. Three states were tested in an arthroscopic group: Native; ATFL cut; and ATFL repair. A multidirectional loading test with five different movements (anterior translation (AT), supination (SUP), pronation (PRO), internal rotation (IR), and external rotation (ER)) was…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFoot and Ankle Surgery · Tendon Structure and Treatment · Orthopedic Surgery and Rehabilitation
