79 results on '"Flanigan, David C."'
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2. High kinesiophobia and pain catastrophizing in people with articular cartilage defects in the knee and associations with knee function
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Thoma, Louise M., Rethorn, Timothy J., Best, Thomas M., Flanigan, David C., and Schmitt, Laura C.
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- 2021
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3. Meniscus repair five-year results are influenced by patient pre-injury activity level but not age group
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Everhart, Joshua S., Magnussen, Robert A., Poland, Sarah, DiBartola, Alex C., Blackwell, Ryan, Kim, Walter, Kaeding, Christopher C., and Flanigan, David C.
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- 2020
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4. The relationship between lateral epicondyle morphology and iliotibial band friction syndrome: A matched case–control study
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Everhart, Joshua S., Kirven, James C., Higgins, John, Hair, Andrew, Chaudhari, Ajit A.M.W., and Flanigan, David C.
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- 2019
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5. Clinical factors associated with successful meniscal root repairs: A systematic review
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Jiang, Eric X., Abouljoud, Moneer M., Everhart, Joshua S., DiBartola, Alex C., Kaeding, Christopher C., Magnussen, Robert A., and Flanigan, David C.
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- 2019
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6. Meniscal repair in patients age 40 years and older: A systematic review of 11 studies and 148 patients
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Everhart, Joshua S., Higgins, John D., Poland, Sarah G., Abouljoud, Moneer M., and Flanigan, David C.
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- 2018
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7. Variation in tibial tuberosity lateralization and distance from the tibiofemoral joint line: An anatomic study
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Sojka, John H., Everhart, Joshua S., Kirven, James C., Beal, Matthew D., and Flanigan, David C.
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- 2018
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8. The ACL injury response: A collagen-based analysis
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Everhart, Joshua S., Sojka, John H., Kaeding, Christopher C., Bertone, Alicia L., and Flanigan, David C.
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- 2017
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9. Qualitative visual assessment of the J-sign demonstrates high inter-rater reliability.
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Walla, Nicholas, Moore, Toren, Harangody, Sarah, Fitzpatrick, Sean, Flanigan, David C., Duerr, Robert A., Siston, Robert, and Magnussen, Robert A.
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- 2023
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10. Maximum load to failure of high dose versus low dose gamma irradiation of anterior cruciate ligament allografts: A meta-analysis
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DiBartola, Alex C., Everhart, Joshua S., Kaeding, Christopher C., Magnussen, Robert A., and Flanigan, David C.
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- 2016
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11. Tibiofemoral joint subchondral surface conformity: Individual variability with race and sex-specific trends
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Everhart, Joshua S., Flanigan, David C., Chaudhari, Ajit M.W., and Siston, Robert A.
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- 2016
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12. Correlation between histological outcome and surgical cartilage repair technique in the knee: A meta-analysis
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DiBartola, Alex C., Everhart, Joshua S., Magnussen, Robert A., Carey, James L., Brophy, Robert H., Schmitt, Laura C., and Flanigan, David C.
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- 2016
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13. Patella alta and increased TT-TG distance do not adversely affect patient-reported outcomes following isolated MPFL reconstruction: A systematic review.
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Pappa, Nicholas, Good, Logan, DiBartola, Alex, Martin, Kyle, Flanigan, David C., and Magnussen, Robert A.
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- 2023
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14. Return to activity among athletes with a symptomatic bipartite patella: A systematic review
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Matic, George T. and Flanigan, David C.
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- 2015
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15. Techniques to treat challenging meniscus tears
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Qin, Charles and Flanigan, David C.
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- 2023
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16. Editorial Commentary: Low-Grade Infections May Contribute to Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction Graft Failure.
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Burnett, Zach, Stoodley, Paul, and Flanigan, David C.
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The etiology of anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction failure is often multifactorial, and the role of subclinical bacterial colonization in ACL reconstruction failure has not been fully elucidated. Although the presence of bacterial metabolism in and of itself does not indicate true clinical infection, low-grade infections may contribute to ACL reconstruction graft failure. Bacterial biofilms on soft tissue grafts are shown to change the crimp patterns of collagen and lower graft load to failure. In addition, bacterial DNA has been reported in 80-87% of failed ACL grafts during revision surgery compared to only 20% of primary ACL grafts. Also, higher bacterial DNA concentration is associated with tibial tunnel widening. Further study is needed to establish if any causal relationship between bacterial colonization and ACL graft failure exists. But it does seem that the circumstantial evidence is pointing to such a relationship. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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17. Anterolateral Radial Meniscus Tear Repair using Traction Suture and Super-Hashtag Technique.
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Milliron, Eric M., Moews, Logan, Cavendish, Parker A., Barnes, Ryan H., and Flanigan, David C.
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Radial meniscus tears occur commonly as traumatic tears in younger patients, as well as in association with concomitant degenerative changes. Traditional management of these tears has centered around partial meniscectomy; however, there has been a more recent trend toward preserving the meniscus and attempting repair. Because of the gapping and displacement that frequently occurs with these tears, repair is often challenging and is done under high amounts of tension. The following article describes a technique using a traction suture to aid in maintaining reduction throughout repair. This is followed by the use of a combination of techniques to form a "super-hashtag" configuration of both vertical and horizontal mattress sutures, leading to a secure repair under little tension. [Display omitted] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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18. Horizontal Cleavage Tear Meniscal Repair Using All-Inside Circumferential Compression Sutures.
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Cavendish, Parker A., Coffey, Emily, Milliron, Eric M., Barnes, Ryan H., and Flanigan, David C.
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Horizontal cleavage meniscus tears occur more frequently in older patient populations with degenerative changes within the meniscus. Traditionally, they have been managed with nonsurgical interventions or with partial meniscectomy. As increasing evidence demonstrates the link between partial meniscectomy and progressive osteoarthritis with these types of tears, as well as worse long-term outcomes and reduced cost savings, surgical repair of horizontal cleavage meniscal tears has increased in appropriate patients. This technique article highlights the evaluation, indications, and preferred repair technique for horizontal cleavage tears in appropriately selected patients. [Display omitted] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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19. Failure of osteochondral lesions using bioabsorbable fixation in the adolescent patient: a case report.
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Palumbo, Reid, Kuzma, Scott A., and Flanigan, David C.
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- 2023
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20. Posterior Meniscal Root Repair With Transtibial Double Tunnel Pullout Technique and Anchor Fixation.
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Barnes, Ryan H., Hobayan, C. Grace P., Cavendish, Parker A., Milliron, Eric M., and Flanigan, David C.
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Meniscus root tears are tears that occur within 1 cm of the meniscus root attachment to the tibia. If not repaired, root tears will lead to altered knee biomechanics and accelerated degenerative changes in the knee. In this surgical technique, we demonstrate repair of a meniscus root tear with an all-inside suture repair of the posterior meniscus that is then passed through 2 transtibial tunnels and then fixed with an anchor. After surgery, patients are non-weightbearing for 4 weeks and can return to activity by 6 months. [Display omitted] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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21. Platelet rich plasma use in allograft ACL reconstructions: Two-year clinical results of a MOON cohort study
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Magnussen, Robert A., Flanigan, David C., Pedroza, Angela D., Heinlein, Kate A., and Kaeding, Christopher C.
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- 2013
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22. Survival and clinical outcome of isolated high tibial osteotomy and combined biological knee reconstruction
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Harris, Joshua D., McNeilan, Ryan, Siston, Robert A., and Flanigan, David C.
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- 2013
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23. Proud osteochondral autograft versus synthetic plugs — Contact pressures with cyclical loading in a bovine knee model
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Elguizaoui, Sameh, Flanigan, David C., Harris, Joshua D., Parsons, Erin, Litsky, Alan S., and Siston, Robert A.
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- 2012
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24. Athletes and Nonathletes Show No Difference in Symptoms or Function Prior to Knee Surgery, but Those With Chronic Symptoms Show Increased Pain Catastrophizing and Kinesiophobia.
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DiBartola, Alex C., Magnussen, Robert A., Everhart, Joshua S., Milliron, Eric, Emery, Charles F., Schiele, Steve E., Harris, Kristie M., Schmitt, Laura, and Flanigan, David C.
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To determine whether preoperative psychological status before outpatient knee surgery is influenced by athletic status, symptom chronicity, or prior surgical history. International Knee Documentation Committee subjective scores (IKDC-S), Tegner Activity Scale scores, and Marx Activity Rating Scale scores were collected. Psychological and pain surveys included the McGill pain scale, Pain Catastrophizing Scale, Tampa Scale for Kinesiophobia 11, Patient Health Questionnaire 9, Perceived Stress Scale, New General Self-Efficacy Scale, and Life Orientation Test–Revised for optimism. Linear regression was used to determine the effects of athlete status, symptom chronicity (>6 months or ≤6 months), and history of prior surgery on preoperative knee function, pain, and psychological status after matching for age, sex, and surgical procedure. In total, 497 knee surgery patients (247 athletes, 250 nonathletes) completed a preoperative electronic survey. All patients were age 14 years and older and had knee pathology requiring surgical treatment. Athletes were younger than nonathletes on average (mean [SD], 27.7 [11.4] vs 41.6 [13.5] years; P <.001). The most frequently reported level of play among athletes was intramural or recreational (n = 110, 44.5%). Athletes had higher preoperative IKDC-S scores (mean [SE], 2.5 [1.0] points higher; P =.015) and lower McGill pain scores compared to nonathletes (mean [SE] 2.0 [0.85] points lower; P =.017). After matching for age, sex, athlete status, prior surgery, and procedure type, having chronic symptoms resulted in higher preoperative IKDC-S (P <.001), pain catastrophizing (P <.001), and kinesiophobia scores (P =.044). Athletes demonstrate no difference in symptom/pain and function scores preoperatively when compared to nonathletes of similar age, sex, and knee pathology, as well as no difference in multiple psychological distress outcomes measures. Patients with chronic symptoms have more pain catastrophizing and kinesiophobia, while those who have had prior knee surgeries have slightly higher preoperative McGill pain score. Level III, cross-sectional analysis of prospective cohort study data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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25. Arthroscopic Bone Graft Technique for Two-Stage Revision Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction.
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Welder, Eric, Magnussen, Robert A., Fitzpatrick, Sean, Duerr, Robert A., Kaeding, Christopher C., and Flanigan, David C.
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Revision anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction is an increasingly common procedure, with 2-stage surgery often required to address large bone defects and malpositioned tunnels. The arthroscopic bone grafting technique described herein uses morselized allograft bone to provide reproducible fill of asymmetrical bone defects without autograft harvest or additional loss of native bone. The second stage of the anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction can typically proceed 6 months following bone grafting. [Display omitted] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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26. Safety and Efficacy of an Amniotic Suspension Allograft Injection Over 12 Months in a Single-Blinded, Randomized Controlled Trial for Symptomatic Osteoarthritis of the Knee.
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Gomoll, Andreas H., Farr, Jack, Cole, Brian J., Flanigan, David C., Lattermann, Christian, Mandelbaum, Bert R., Strickland, Sabrina M., Zaslav, Kenneth R., Kimmerling, Kelly A., and Mowry, Katie C.
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Purpose: The purpose of this study is to determine the efficacy of amniotic suspension allograft (ASA) compared to hyaluronic acid (HA) and saline at up to 12 months of follow-up through the use of patient-reported outcomes, immunoglobulin levels, and anti-human leukocyte antigen (HLA) levels.Methods: Within this multicenter study, 200 patients were randomized 1:1:1 to a single intra-articular injection of saline, HA, or ASA. Patient-reported outcomes, including Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (KOOS) and visual analog scale (VAS) score, were collected at multiple time points (baseline, 1 week, 6 weeks, 3 months, 6 months) out to 12 months to assess improvements in pain and function. Radiographs at baseline and 12 months were taken to determine radiographic changes, while blood was collected at baseline, 6 weeks, and 6 months to determine changes in immunoglobulins and anti-HLA levels. Statistical analyses were performed using last observation carried forward and mixed effects model for repeated measures.Results: Treatment with ASA resulted in significant improvements in KOOS and VAS scores that were maintained through 12 months (P < .05). Treatment with ASA resulted in a 63.2% responder rate at 12 months using the Outcome Measures in Arthritis Clinical Trials-Osteoarthritis Research Society International simplified definition. There were no significant differences between groups for radiographic measures in the index knee, immunoglobulins, C-reactive protein, or anti-HLA serum levels (P > .05). The number and type of adverse events (AEs) reported for ASA were comparable to the HA injection group, while no treatment-emergent AEs were reported for the saline group.Conclusions: This randomized controlled trial of ASA vs HA and saline for the treatment of symptomatic knee osteoarthritis demonstrated clinically meaningful improved outcomes with ASA over the controls out to 12 months postinjection. No concerning immunologic or adverse reactions to the ASA injection were identified with regards to severe AEs, immunoglobulin, or anti-HLA levels.Level Of Evidence: Level I, randomized controlled multicenter trial. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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27. Orthopaedic Surgery Sports Medicine Fellows See Substantial Increase in Hip Arthroscopy Procedural Volume With High Variability From 2011 to 2016.
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Gordon, Adam M., Flanigan, David C., Malik, Azeem Tariq, and Vasileff, William
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Purpose: To analyze the trends in operative experience, specifically procedures of the shoulder, hip and knee, of fellows graduating from Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education orthopaedic sports medicine fellowships between 2011 and 2016.Methods: The 2011-2016 Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education orthopaedic surgery sports medicine fellow case logs were retrieved for analysis. Trends in the mean case volume for procedures of the shoulder, hip, and knee were analyzed. Linear regression was used to identify significant changes in trends over time for each surgical case/procedure. Variation in case volume between fellows in the lowest (10th) and highest (90th) centile was assessed for first and last year of the study.Results: The average number of total procedures per fellow minimally decreased by 3.5% from 2011 to 2016 (726 to 701 cases) (P < .001). The mean total number of hip procedures significantly increased by 155% from 24.9 to 63.5 (P = .049). There were no significant differences in the mean total number of shoulder (P = .88) and knee procedures (P = .54). Arthroscopic hip procedures had the largest increase from 2011 to 2016 (14.1 to 57.8 [+310%], P = .049). There was greater than 2-fold difference in total procedural volume between fellows in the 10th and 90th percentile for 2011 and 2016, with the greatest variation (64-fold) for arthroscopic hip procedures.Conclusions: In this study there was a 2.6-fold increase in hip procedures, largely driven by a 310% rise in arthroscopic hip cases. The average procedural volume per fellow minimally decreased, with no change in the mean number of shoulder and knee procedures.Clinical Relevance: Understanding variability in case exposure among orthopaedic sports medicine fellowships is important for programs to ensure that fellows are appropriately exposed to all facets of sports medicine procedures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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28. Technique for Biplanar Lateral Opening Wedge Distal Femoral Osteotomy in the Valgus Knee.
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Duerr, Robert A., Harangody, Sarah, Magnussen, Robert A., Kaeding, Christopher C., and Flanigan, David C.
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Valgus malalignment can be corrected with a biplanar lateral opening wedge distal femoral osteotomy (bLOWDFO) in patients with symptomatic lateral compartment disease. Advantages of a lateral opening wedge technique over the medial closing wedge technique include avoidance of vascular structures and theoretically better control of the amount of correction. The advantages of a bLOWDFO over a uniplanar osteotomy are that it creates a larger surface area for healing, and provides inherent stability to control the osteotomy intraoperatively. The purpose of this article is to present a reproducible technique for bLOWDFO and review the indications, preoperative planning, rationale, and clinical outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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29. Patient Outcomes After Horizontal Cleavage Tear Repair: A Systematic Review.
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Morris, Jesse H., Magnussen, Robert A., DiBartola, Alex C., Aldabbeh, Summer, Duerr, Robert A., Kaeding, Christopher C., and Flanigan, David C.
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Purpose: To analyze the clinical outcomes and survivorship of meniscal horizontal cleavage tear (HCT) repairs with hopes of guiding future treatment decisions.Methods: Standard systematic review methodology was used. A comprehensive search of PubMed was conducted on June 1, 2019. The inclusion criteria were articles that were published in English, involved human subjects, and reported on at least 1 outcome after repair of HCTs. The exclusion criteria included technique guides and reviews, studies without full text available, and studies with HCT outcomes not separated from other repair groups. Effect heterogeneity was determined using the I2 measure. Forest plots were created in addition to a random-effects model to show the results.Results: The systematic review yielded 19 studies evaluating 289 knees in a total of 273 patients. At most recent follow-up, there was a high probability of return to sport (93.1% [67 of 72]). Overall, 74% of patients (67 of 90) were symptom free at last follow-up, and 80% expressed satisfaction with their overall result (80 of 100). The most frequently reported subjective outcome was the Lysholm score, which improved from a preoperative study range of 48 to 79 (I2 = 20.7%, P = .283) to a postoperative study range of 56 to 99 (I2 = 49%, P = .081). The next most commonly reported was the International Knee Documentation Committee subjective score, which improved from a preoperative study range of 16 to 49 (I2 = 47.7%, P = .125) to a postoperative study range of 72 to 95 (I2 = 0%, P = .660). An overall 11.7% reported risk of reoperation was found, with most cases involving revision meniscectomy. Rates of complications beyond fixation failure were overall very low, with infrequent reports of septic arthritis and transitory dysesthesia.Conclusions: The short- to intermediate-term results of repair of HCTs are comparable to prior studies. Survivorship is comparable to repairs of other types of meniscal tears with high rates of return to sport and low complication rates.Level Of Evidence: Level IV, systematic review of Level I-IV studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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30. Technique for Medial Closing-Wedge Proximal Tibia Osteotomy in the Valgus Knee.
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Duerr, Robert A., Harangody, Sarah, Magnussen, Robert A., Kaeding, Christopher C., and Flanigan, David C.
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Valgus malalignment can be corrected with a medial closing-wedge proximal tibia osteotomy in patients with symptomatic lateral compartment disease. Advantages of this technique include the inherent stability of the closing wedge with direct bone contact and reliable healing that enables early weight bearing and shorter recovery time. In addition, a tibial-based osteotomy alters joint contact forces in both flexion and extension versus femoral-based osteotomies. The purpose of this article is to present a reproducible technique for medial closing-wedge proximal tibia osteotomy and review the indications, preoperative planning, rationale, and clinical outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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31. Subjective Knee Function and Risk of Failure Are Equivalent for Men and Women at 5 Years After Meniscus Repair.
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Everhart, Joshua S., Magnussen, Robert A., Cavendish, Parker A., Axcell, Kent, Blackwell, Ryan, Kaeding, Christopher C., and Flanigan, David C.
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Purpose: To determine whether subjective knee function or risk of repair failure differ between men and women at mean 5 years following meniscal repair with or without concomitant anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction.Methods: A total of 235 patients (97 women, 138 men; mean age, 29.1 years; standard deviation, 11.3) were assessed for meniscus repair failure and postoperative knee function at mean 5.8 years follow-up. Knee symptoms were assessed with International Knee Documentation Committee Subjective (IKDC-S) scores. Postoperative activity scores were assessed with Marx activity score. Independent effects of patient age and activity level on meniscus failure risk and patient-reported outcomes were determined by multivariate analysis with adjustment for age, body mass index, anterior cruciate ligament status, tear pattern, and number of implants used at the time of surgery.Results: Failures occurred in 18.9% of men and 21.0% of women with no difference in mean time to failure (P = .75) or risk of failure for men vs women (P = .57) in the univariate analysis. Male sex was not an independent risk factor for failure after adjustment for patient age, body mass index, concomitant anterior cruciate ligament status, tear pattern, or number of implants used (P = .16). Marx activity scores at follow-up were higher among men in multivariate analysis (P = .009). Men and women had similar IKDC-S scores at follow-up in the unadjusted (P = .25) and multivariate analyses (P = .21).Conclusions: Following meniscus repair, both sexes report similar subjective knee function, though men have higher self-reported activity scores. Meniscus repair failure risk does not differ between men or women at mid-term follow up.Level Of Evidence: Level III, retrospective case-control study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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32. Pain perception and coping strategies influence early outcomes following knee surgery in athletes.
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Everhart, Joshua S., Chafitz, Aaron J., Harris, Kristie M., Schiele, Steven E., Emery, Charles F., and Flanigan, David C.
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Objectives: To determine whether pain perceptions and coping strategies are predictive of the following outcomes after knee surgery in athletes: (1) return to similar level of sport, (2) improvement in symptoms, and (3) improvement in kinesiophobia.Design: Prospective cohort study.Methods: 101 athletes (52 men, 49 women; mean age 32.7years) at mean 12.1months follow-up were included. Independent relationships between patient outcomes and pre-operative measures were determined: short form McGill Pain questionnaire (SF-MPQ), Pain Catastrophizing Scale (PCS), Pain Coping Measure (PCM), and the brief COPE subscales of acceptance, denial, positive reframing, and use of instrumental support. Adjustment was performed for length of follow-up, symptom duration, surgical history, age, activity level, and surgical procedure.Results: Rate of return to similar level of sport was 73%; severe pain catastrophizers (PCS >36 points) had increased odds of not returning to similar level of sport (OR 11.3 CI 1.51, 236; p=0.02) whereas COPE-use of instrumental support was protective (per point increase: 0.72 CI 0.54, 0.94; p=0.02). Problem-focused coping positively correlated with improvement in IKDC-S scores (beta 0.032 SE 0.010; p=0.001). Improvement in kinesiophobia after surgery was less likely with higher pre-operative perceived pain frequency (OR 0.23 CI 0.06, 0.71; p=0.009) and higher COPE-denial scores (OR 0.43 CI 0.21, 0.88; p=0.02).Conclusions: Among athletes undergoing knee surgery, severe pain catastrophizing is negatively associated with return to similar level of sport. Instrumental support and problem-focused coping strategies are associated with improved outcomes. High preoperative pain scores are negatively associated with improvement in kinesiophobia after rehabilitation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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33. Corrigendum to “The relationship between lateral epicondyle morphology and iliotibial band friction syndrome: A matched case–control study [The Knee 26 (2019) 1198–1203]”
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Everhart, Joshua S., Kirven, James C., Higgins, John, Hair, Andrew, Chaudhari, Ajit M.W., and Flanigan, David C.
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- 2020
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34. Age of 40 Years or Older Does Not Affect Meniscal Repair Failure Risk at 5 Years.
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Poland, Sarah, Everhart, Joshua S., Kim, Walter, Axcell, Kent, Magnussen, Robert A., and Flanigan, David C.
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Purpose: To compare meniscal repair failure rates in patients aged 40 years or older versus patients younger than 40 years.Methods: A total of 276 patients underwent meniscal repair surgery by a single sports medicine fellowship-trained surgeon between 2006 and 2012 and were eligible for study inclusion. Patients were followed up for meniscal repair failure, defined as meniscectomy, repeated meniscal repair, or total knee arthroplasty. Logistic regression analysis was used to determine the risk of failure while controlling for potential confounding variables including body mass index, sex, anterior cruciate ligament status, time from injury to surgery, number of implants used, tear pattern, and chondral status at the time of the repair.Results: Among the 276 eligible patients, 221 (80%) were successfully contacted for follow-up at an average of 5 years after surgery. Of these patients, 56 were aged 40 years or older (mean, 47.2 years; standard deviation [SD], 5.3 years) and 165 were younger than 40 years (mean, 24.7 years; SD, 6.7 years). The overall meniscal repair failure rate over a 5-year period was 20%. Among patients aged 40 years or older, the failure risk was 18% versus 21% in patients younger than 40 years. After adjustment for confounding variables, age of 40 years or older was not associated with increased failure risk (adjusted odds ratio, 0.83; 95% confidence interval, 0.36-1.81; P = .65). The mean time to failure tended to be shorter in older patients, at 16.9 months (SD, 10.2 months) versus 28.5 months in the group younger than 40 years (SD, 23.3 months) (P = .04).Conclusions: Age of 40 years or older is not associated with an increased risk of meniscal repair failure at 5 years, although a shorter time to failure was noted in this age cohort.Level Of Evidence: Level III, retrospective comparative study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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35. Bacterial Deoxyribonucleic Acid Is Often Present in Failed Revision Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstructions.
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Everhart, Joshua S., DiBartola, Alex C., Dusane, Devendra H., Magnussen, Robert A., Kaeding, Christopher C., Stoodley, Paul, and Flanigan, David C.
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Purpose: To determine whether bacterial DNA will be detectable by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) in torn graft tissue at the time of revision anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (ACLR).Methods: A total of 31 consecutive revision ACLR cases from 1 center from 2014-2016 were recruited. No patients had clinical signs of infection on presentation. Torn graft tissue was obtained in revision cases and subjected to clinical culture and PCR analysis with a universal bacterial primer. Fluorescence microscopy was used to confirm the presence of a biofilm. We obtained negative control samples of water open to air on the field and excess primary ACLR graft tissue, as well as torn native ligament, to evaluate for PCR positivity due to environmental contamination.Results: Clinical cultures were positive (coagulase-negative Staphylococcus) in 1 revision case (3%, 1 of 31). Bacterial DNA was detectable in most revision ACLR cases (87.0%, 27 of 31), and there was a low rate of PCR positivity in negative control samples of water open to air (0%, 0 of 3), excess primary ACLR graft tissue after passage (20%, 1 of 5), or native torn ligament (20%, 1 of 5). Bacterial biofilm presence on failed graft tissue as well as monofilament suture was visually confirmed with fluorescence microscopy.Conclusions: Bacterial DNA is frequently present in failed ACLR grafts, with high rates of DNA detection by PCR but low culture positivity.Level Of Evidence: Level IV, case series. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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36. Risk of Retear Following Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction Using a Hybrid Graft of Autograft Augmented With Allograft Tissue: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis.
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Abouljoud, Moneer M., Everhart, Joshua S., Sigman, Benjamin O., Flanigan, David C., and Magnussen, Robert A.
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Purpose: To compare the risk of anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction failure in patients who undergo anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction with either autograft tissue or hybrid grafts.Methods: A systematic search was performed on February 28, 2018, on PubMed, Scopus, Arthroscopy, and Cochrane Library. Included studies were clinical outcome studies of primary anterior cruciate ligament reconstructions that compared failure risk for hybrid grafts versus autografts. Baseline and outcomes data were extracted, and reporting quality was assessed via modified Coleman criteria. A random effects meta-analysis was conducted for both randomized and nonrandomized studies.Results: Nine studies were identified with a mean of 40.1 months of follow-up. The mean Coleman methodology score was 66.5 (standard deviation, 12.8). One randomized study (Level II evidence) was identified with no difference in failure rates (0% for both groups, 8-mm minimum graft diameter for all patients). Eight nonrandomized studies (all Level III evidence) were identified with no difference in failure risk for hybrid grafts versus autograft (pooled odds ratio, 1.29; 95% confidence interval, 0.57-2.92; P = .55; I2 = 34%). Mean graft diameters were significantly larger in hybrid groups (range, 8.5-9.9 mm) than in autograft groups (range, 6.4-8.8 mm) in nonrandomized studies (mean difference, 0.5-2.5 mm; P ≤ .003). There was no evidence of small study bias or bias owing to reporting quality, and adjustment for length of follow-up, mean patient age, percentage of male patients, year of publication, or reporting quality did not improve statistical heterogeneity.Conclusions: Based on the current literature, although it may be theoretically detrimental to add allograft to a small-diameter autograft, it cannot be definitively shown based on the findings of this review with meta-analysis. Currently, it remains unclear that there is an advantage or disadvantage to hybridization of small autograft with allograft, although randomized studies of patients with small (<8-mm) autograft diameters are lacking.Level Of Evidence: Level III, systematic review of Level II and III studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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37. Return to Work or Sport After Multiligament Knee Injury: A Systematic Review of 21 Studies and 524 Patients.
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Everhart, Joshua S., Du, Amy, Chalasani, Radhika, Kirven, James C., Magnussen, Robert A., and Flanigan, David C.
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Purpose: To systematically review multiligament knee injury (MLKI) outcome studies to determine overall rates of return to work or sport after MLKI and risk factors for lack of return to work or sport after MLKI.Methods: A search was performed of MLKI outcome studies from 1950 to March 1, 2017. Ninety-two studies were identified. All included reported return to work, return to sport, or Tegner activity scores. Rates of return to work or sport were determined for overall population and by obesity status, injury severity, and presence of peroneal nerve or vascular injury.Results: A total of 524 patients (21 studies) were included. Return to high-level sport was low (22%-33%). Return to any level of sport was 53.6% overall (178/332), with a higher rate reported in studies with all surgical patients (59.1%, 114/193 patients) versus studies with mixed surgical and nonoperative treatment (46.0%, 64/139 patients) (P = .02). Rate of return to work with little or no modifications was 62.1% (146/200) and return to any work was 88.4% (190/215). Obese patients had lower postoperative Tegner scores than a general population (obese: mean 1.7 ± 1.2; nonobese: mean 4.5 ± 1.0; P < .001). Among studies without Schenck grade IV and V injuries, return to work with no or minimal modifications (100%, 12/12 patients) was higher than studies including grade IV and V patients (66.0%, 70/106 patients) (P = .017). Return to any work was higher in studies without vascular injuries (96.3%, 105/109) versus those including them (80.2%, 85/106) (P < .001).Conclusions: Return to sport after MLKI occurs in approximately 60% of surgically treated patients, though return to high-level sport is lower. Return to work is frequently possible after MLKI though it may require workplace or job duty modifications. Obesity, nonoperative treatment, higher injury severity, and vascular injury are associated with poorer functional outcomes.Level Of Evidence: Level IV, systematic review of level III and IV studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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38. Graft Choice in Isolated Medial Patellofemoral Ligament Reconstruction: A Systematic Review With Meta-analysis of Rates of Recurrent Instability and Patient-Reported Outcomes for Autograft, Allograft, and Synthetic Options.
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McNeilan, Ryan J., Everhart, Joshua S., Mescher, Patrick K., Abouljoud, Moneer, Magnussen, Robert A., and Flanigan, David C.
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Purpose: To determine whether graft selection or patient age affects the following after isolated medial patellofemoral ligament (MPFL) reconstruction: (1) rates of recurrent instability, (2) rates of postoperative complications (other than instability), and (3) subjective symptom improvement.Methods: A systematic search identified studies reporting outcomes for isolated MPFL reconstruction. Rates of recurrent instability, subjective Kujala knee function scores, and complications were tabulated. Symptom improvement was defined as change in Kujala score (preoperative evaluation to final follow-up).Results: Forty-five studies were included with 27 documented cases of recurrent instability among 1,504 patients (1.8%); instability rates ranged from 0% to 20.0% overall; among autograft in adults, 0% to 11.1% (1.4%, 18/1,260); among autograft in adolescents, 0% to 20% (10.0%, 8/80); among allograft, 0% (0/65 cases); and among synthetic, 0% to 3.3% (1.3%, 1/76). Among autograft choices in adults, rates of recurrent instability were low; recurrence with gracilis ranged from 0% to 11.1% (0.9%, 1/116); with semitendinosus, 0% to 6.3% (0.6%, 4/676); with quad or patellar tendon, 0% (0/65); and with adductor tendon, 5.6% to 8.3% (6.7%, 2/30). Complication rates ranged from 0% to 34.4%. All included studies reported significant improvement in Kujala scores after surgery (P < .01). There was significant heterogeneity in effect size and evidence of reporting bias among small studies, precluding reliable pooled analysis of treatment effect.Conclusions: Autograft is not superior to allograft or synthetic grafts for isolated reconstruction of the MPFL, and rates of recurrent instability are generally low. Isolated MPFL reconstruction can provide significant symptom relief regardless of graft selection, although there is a bias toward reporting better than expected results among smaller studies. Pediatric patients and patients treated with adductor tendon autograft have higher recurrent instability rates. While caution should be used in making definitive recommendations secondary to the small number of allograft and synthetic studies, selection of graft type based on surgeon preference, comfort, and prior experience remains appropriate.Level Of Evidence: Level IV, systematic review of Level I to IV studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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39. Podium Presentation Title: The More the Merrier? An Analysis of Meniscus Repair Failure Using All-Inside Implants.
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Dibartola, Alex C., Oosten, James, Wright, Jonathan, Kirven, James C., Magnussen, Robert A., Kaeding, Christopher, Duerr, Robert A., and Flanigan, David C.
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- 2023
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40. Change in Anterior Cruciate Ligament Graft Choice and Outcomes Over Time.
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Kaeding, Christopher C., Pedroza, Angela D., Reinke, Emily K., Huston, Laura J., Hewett, Timothy E., Flanigan, David C., Spindler, Kurt P., and MOON Knee Group
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Purpose: To analyze failure rate in 2-year increments to determine if graft choice changed over time and graft failure rate.Methods: A prospective 2002-2008 database was used to identify risk factors for anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) retear. Subjects who had primary ACL retear with no history of contralateral surgery and 2-year follow-up were included. Subjects who underwent a multiligament reconstruction were excluded. Graft type, age, sex, smoking status, body mass index, Marx activity level at index surgery, medial and lateral meniscus status at time of ACL retear, sport played after ACL reconstruction, and clinical site were evaluated. Analysis was repeated using 2002-2003 (early) and 2007-2008 (late) 2-year databases. Analysis of variance with post hoc analysis was performed to detect significant differences in age and Marx score by graft type over time.Results: Two-year follow-up for graft failure was obtained on 2,497 of 2,692 (93%) subjects. There were 112 of 2,497 (4.5%) ACL retears identified at 2-year follow-up. The only predictor that changed between early/late periods was allograft use. Allograft odds ratio decreased from 13.1 to 9.5 (P < .01). Allografts were used in older patients (31-40 years) and with lower Marx scores (10-8) from early to late periods. The mean age of subjects who received bone-patellar tendon-bone autografts did not significantly change over time (22.8-23.5). The mean age of subjects who received hamstring autografts fell (27.9-25.5). The mean age of subjects who received allografts rose significantly (31.3-39.8, P < .01). The mean Marx score of subjects who received bone-patellar tendon-bone and hamstring autografts did not significantly change over time. The mean Marx score of subjects who received allografts decreased significantly (P < .01).Conclusions: After early recognition, allograft use in young active patients was a risk factor for retear; graft choice by surgeons changed in the late period to use of allografts in older and less-active patients, which correlated with a significant decrease in retear risk.Level Of Evidence: Level III, case control study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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41. Treatment Options for Patellar Tendinopathy: A Systematic Review.
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Everhart, Joshua S., Cole, Devon, Sojka, John H., Higgins, John D., Magnussen, Robert A., Schmitt, Laura C., and Flanigan, David C.
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Purpose: To compare the efficacy of common invasive and noninvasive patellar tendinopathy (PT) treatment strategies.Methods: A systematic search was performed in PubMed, Google Scholar, CINAHL, UptoDate, Cochrane Reviews, and SPORTDiscus. Fifteen studies met the following inclusion criteria: (1) therapeutic outcome trial for PT, and (2) Victorian Institute of Sports Assessment was used to assess symptom severity at follow-up. Methodological quality and reporting bias were evaluated with a modified Coleman score and Begg's and Egger's tests of bias, respectively.Results: A total of 15 studies were included. Reporting quality was high (mean Coleman score 86.0, standard deviation 9.7), and there was no systematic evidence of reporting bias. Increased duration of symptoms resulted in poorer outcomes regardless of treatment (0.9% decrease in improvement per additional month of symptoms; P = .004). Eccentric training with or without core stabilization or stretching improved symptoms (61% improvement in the Victorian Institute of Sports Assessment score, 95% confidence interval [CI] 53% to 69%). Surgery in patients refractory to nonoperative treatment also improved symptoms (57%, 95% CI 52% to 62%) with similar outcomes among arthroscopic and open approaches. Results from shockwave (54%, 95% CI 22% to 87%) and platelet-rich plasma (PRP) studies (55%, 95% CI 5% to 105%) varied widely though PRP may accelerate early recovery. Finally, steroid injection provided no benefit (20%, 95% CI -20% to 60%).Conclusions: Initial treatment of PT can consist of eccentric squat-based therapy, shockwave, or PRP as monotherapy or an adjunct to accelerate recovery. Surgery or shockwave can be considered for patients who fail to improve after 6 months of conservative treatment. Corticosteroid therapy should not be used in the treatment of PT.Level Of Evidence: Level IV, systematic review of Level II-IV studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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42. Editorial Commentary: The Trend to Blend: Should We Be Using Hybrid Grafts in Adult Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstructions?
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Flanigan, David C and Magnussen, Robert A
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Hybrid anterior cruciate ligament grafts augmenting a small-diameter hamstring tendon autograft with nonirradiated allografts can be used with good results in adults. In teens, however, outcomes of hybrid grafts have not been well defined, and other solutions to small hamstring grafts including graft folding, contralateral autograft augmentation, or selection of a different autograft source could be considered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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43. Clinical Outcomes After Autologous Chondrocyte Implantation in Adolescents' Knees: A Systematic Review.
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DiBartola, Alex C., Wright, Brennan M., Magnussen, Robert A., and Flanigan, David C.
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Purpose: To perform a systematic review of the use of autologous chondrocyte implantation (ACI) in the adolescent knee.Specific Aims: (1) quantify clinical outcomes of ACI in adolescent knees, (2) identify lesion and patient factors that correlate with clinical outcome, and (3) determine the incidence of complications of ACI in adolescents.Methods: PubMed, MEDLINE, SCOPUS, CINAHL, and Cochrane Collaboration Library databases were searched systematically. Outcome scores recorded included the International Knee Documentation Committee score, the International Cartilage Repair Society score, the Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score, the visual analog scale, the Bentley Functional Rating Score, the Modified Cincinnati Rating System, Tegner activity Lysholm scores, and return athletics. Outcome scores were compared among studies based on proportion of adolescents achieving specific outcome quartiles at a minimum 1-year follow-up. Methodologic quality of studies was evaluated by Coleman Methodology Scores (CMSs).Results: Five studies reported on 115 subjects who underwent ACI with periosteal cover (ACI-P; 95, 83%), ACI with type I/type III collagen cover (ACI-C; 6, 5%), or matrix-induced ACI (MACI; 14, 12%). Mean patient age was 16.2 years (range, 11 to 21 years). All studies were case series. Follow-up ranged from 12 to 74 months (mean, 52.3 months). Mean defect size was 5.3 cm(2) (range, 0.96 to 14 cm(2)). All studies reported improvement in clinical outcomes scores. Graft hypertrophy was the most common complication (7.0%). The mean preoperative clinical outcome percentage (based on percentage of outcome scale used) was 37% (standard deviation [SD], 18.9%) and the mean postoperative clinical outcome percentage was 72.7% (SD, 16.9%). The overall percentage increase in clinical outcome scores was 35.7% (SD, 14.2%). Mean CMS was 47.8 (SD, 8.3).Conclusions: Cartilage repair in adolescent knees using ACI provides success across different clinical outcomes measures. The only patient- or lesion-specific factor that influenced clinical outcome was the shorter duration of preoperative symptoms.Level Of Evidence: Level IV, systemic review of Level I-IV studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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44. Does Gracilis Preservation Matter in Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction? A Systematic Review.
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Sharma, Avijit, Flanigan, David C., Randall, Kyle, and Magnussen, Robert A.
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Purpose: To analyze the effect of gracilis harvest on hamstring strength, patient-reported outcomes, and anterior knee laxity after anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction.Methods: A systematic review of the literature was performed to identify studies comparing the results of semitendinosus (ST) versus semitendinosus-gracilis (ST-G) harvest for ACL reconstruction. A meta-analysis using a random effects model was performed to determine overall pooled estimates of effect for the influence of additional gracilis harvest on hamstring strength, patient-reported outcomes, and anterior knee laxity after ACL reconstruction.Results: Twelve studies were identified and included in the review. ST-G harvest was noted to decrease hamstring isokinetic strength at 60° per second by 3.85% relative to isolated ST harvest (P = .01). Decreased isometric strength was also noted in the ST-G harvest group at both 90° of flexion (mean difference: 5.55%; P = .03) and 105° to 110° of flexion (mean difference: 13.68%; P = .003). Active knee flexion angle loss was also noted to be greater in the ST-G harvest group (mean difference: 3.91°; P = .006). No differences were found in isokinetic strength at 180° to 240° per second (mean difference: 3.20%; P = .08), patient-reported outcome scores (mean difference: 1.87 points; P = .06), or anterior knee laxity (mean difference: 0.03 mm; P = .78) based on gracilis harvest.Conclusions: The addition of gracilis harvest to an isolated ST harvest for ACL reconstruction results in statistically significant, but likely not clinically relevant differences in isokinetic and isometric hamstring strength as well as patient-reported outcomes. Hamstring strength deficits may be larger at higher flexion angles.Level Of Evidence: Level III, systematic review of level I-III studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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45. Bone-Patellar Tendon-Bone Versus Soft-Tissue Allograft for Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction: A Systematic Review.
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Joyce, Christopher D., Randall, Kyle L., Mariscalco, Michael W., Magnussen, Robert A., and Flanigan, David C.
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Purpose: To describe the outcomes of bone-patellar tendon-bone (BPTB) and soft-tissue allografts in anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction with respect to graft failure risk, physical examination findings, instrumented laxity, and patient-reported outcomes.Methods: A search of the PubMed, Scopus, CINAHL (Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature) Complete, Cochrane Collaboration, and SPORTDiscus databases was performed. English-language studies with outcome data on primary ACL reconstruction with nonirradiated BPTB and soft-tissue allografts were identified. Outcome data included failure risk, physical examination findings, instrumented laxity measurements, and patient-reported outcome scores.Results: Seventeen studies met the inclusion criteria. Of these studies, 11 reported on BPTB allografts exclusively, 5 reported on soft-tissue allografts exclusively, and 1 compared both types. The comparative study showed no difference in failure risk, Lachman grade, pivot-shift grade, instrumented laxity, or overall International Knee Documentation Committee score between the 2 allograft types. Data from all studies yielded a failure risk of 10.3% (95% confidence interval [CI], 4.5% to 18.1%) in the soft-tissue group and 15.2% (95% CI, 11.3% to 19.6%) in the BPTB group. The risk of a Lachman grade greater than 5 mm was 6.4% (95% CI, 1.7% to 13.7%) in the soft-tissue group and 8.6% (95% CI, 6.3% to 11.2%) in the BPTB group. The risk of a grade 2 or 3 pivot shift was 1.4% (95% CI, 0.3% to 3.3%) in the soft-tissue group and 4.1% (95% CI, 1.9% to 7.2%) in the BPTB group.Conclusions: One comparative study showed no difference in results after ACL reconstruction with nonirradiated BPTB and soft-tissue allografts. Inclusion of case series in the analysis showed qualitatively similar outcomes with the 2 graft types. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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46. Smaller Iatrogenic Defects Created by Inside-Out Compared With All-Inside Meniscus Repair Devices in Human Cadaveric Model.
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Calafiore, David A., Magnussen, Robert A., Everhart, Joshua S., DiBartola, Alex C., Milliron, Eric M., Kaeding, Christopher C., and Flanigan, David C.
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Purpose: (1) To investigate the pattern and diameter of the iatrogenic defect that meniscal repair devices impose on meniscal tissue and (2) to determine whether repair-induced defect patterns or diameters differ across devices.Methods: Sixty-one fresh frozen human cadaveric menisci were used (n = 9; eliminated). All-inside devices (n = 9) included ULTRA FAST-FIX, FAST-FIX 360, Depuy Mitek 0° and 12° TRUESPAN, ConMed Sequent, Zimmer Biomet JuggerStitch, Stryker IvyAIR, Arthrex FiberStitch and Meniscal Cinch II. Inside-out needles (n = 4) included ConMed HiFi, Depuy Mitek ORTHOCORD, Arthrex-2-0 FiberWire, and Stryker SharpShooter. Following India Ink staining, implant devices were inserted into cadaveric menisci. Samples were fixed in formalin solution and imaged with a high-resolution camera. Defects were classified by qualitative evaluation. Defect and needle diameter were quantified with software assistance. Statistical analysis was performed using analysis of variance testing.Results: We analyzed 644 iatrogenic defects with mean defect diameter of 1.96 mm (standard deviation 0.86). For all-inside devices, defect patterns (n = 436) were 15.6% linear, 38.1% semilunar, 46.3% stellate, while inside-out devices (n = 208) were 95.7% stellate, 4.3% linear, and 0.0% semilunar. All-inside devices had mean defect diameter of 2.46 mm, while inside-out meniscus needles had mean 0.90 mm defect diameter (P < .001). FasT-FIX 360, ULTRA-FAST-FIX, and Arthrex Meniscal Cinch II induced smaller diameter defects than other all-inside devices (F = 20.2, P < .05). Strong positive correlation was found comparing outer needle diameter and mean defect diameters across all devices (R2 = 0.9447).Conclusions: Needles utilized in meniscal implant systems produce the following basic defect patterns: stellate (62.3%), semilunar (25.8%), and linear (11.9%). A strong positive correlation was found between mean defect size and outer needle diameter across all devices. Inside-out double-armed flexible needles produced significantly smaller defects than all-inside devices. Of the all-inside devices, ULTRA FAST-FIX, FAST-FIX 360, and Arthrex Meniscal Cinch II produced smaller defects on average.Clinical Relevance: While the true clinical impact of these findings cannot be drawn from the present study, this investigation provides necessary context to better understand reported similarities and differences in healing rates and outcomes between inside-out and all-inside repair techniques. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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47. The Incidence of Complications of Tibial Tubercle Osteotomy: A Systematic Review.
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Payne, Joshua, Rimmke, Nathan, Schmitt, Laura C., Flanigan, David C., and Magnussen, Robert A.
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Purpose The goal of this review was to quantify the risk of perioperative and early postoperative complications of tibial tubercle osteotomy (TTO) with different techniques. Methods A systematic review of multiple databases was performed to identify studies that reported complications of TTO. Complications were defined as any adverse outcome, including osteotomy site nonunion, fracture, infection, wound complications, neurovascular complications, deep vein thrombosis (DVT), and pulmonary embolism (PE). Major complications were defined as nonunion, fracture, infections/wound complications requiring return to the operating room, and DVT or PE. The risk of subsequent hardware removal was also quantified. Results The 19 identified studies included a total of 787 TTOs: 472 direct medialization procedures (Elmslie-Trillat technique), 193 anteromedialization procedures (Fulkerson technique), and 102 procedures in which the tibial tubercle was completely detached for medialization or distalization, or a combination. The overall complication risk was 4.6%. The risk of complications was higher when the tibial tubercle was completely detached (10.7%) than with Elmslie-Trillat (3.3%) or Fulkerson (3.7%) procedures ( P = .004). The overall risk of major complications was 3.0%. Hardware removal was performed in 36.7% of osteotomies and was less frequent with the Elmslie-Trillat technique (26.8%) than with the Fulkerson technique (49.0%) or complete tubercle detachment (48.3%) ( P < .001). Conclusions Tibial tubercle osteotomy is a complex surgical procedure with a significant risk of complications. Osteotomies that involve complete detachment of the tubercle have an increased risk of complications compared with those in which a distal cortical hinge is maintained. Level of Evidence Level IV, systematic review of Level IV studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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48. Smoking Predisposes to Rotator Cuff Pathology and Shoulder Dysfunction: A Systematic Review.
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Bishop, Julie Y., Santiago-Torres, Juan E., Rimmke, Nathan, and Flanigan, David C.
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Purpose To investigate the association of smoking with rotator cuff (RTC) disease and shoulder dysfunction, defined as poor scores on shoulder rating scales. Methods A systematic review was performed using a search strategy based on “shoulder AND [smoke OR smoking OR nicotine OR tobacco].” English-language clinical or basic science studies testing the association of smoking and shoulder dysfunction on shoulder rating scales or disease of the soft tissue of the shoulder were included. Level V evidence studies and articles reporting only on surgery outcomes, subjective symptoms, adhesive capsulitis, or presence of fracture or oncologic mass were excluded. Results Thirteen studies were included, comprising a total of 16,172 patients, of whom 6,081 were smokers. All 4 clinical studies addressing the association between smoking and patient-reported shoulder symptoms and dysfunction in terms of poor scores on shoulder rating scales (i.e., Simple Shoulder Test; University of California, Los Angeles shoulder scale; and self-reported surveys) confirmed this correlation with 6,678 patients, of whom 1,723 were smokers. Two of four studies documenting provider-reported RTC disease comprised 8,461 patients, of whom 4,082 were smokers, and found a time- and dose-dependent relation of smoking with RTC tears and a correlation of smoking with impingement syndrome. Smoking was also reported in 4 other articles to be associated with the prevalence of larger RTC tears or tears with pronounced degenerative changes in 1,033 patients, of whom 276 were smokers, and may accelerate RTC degeneration, which could result in tears at a younger age. In addition, 1 basic science study showed that nicotine increased stiffness of the supraspinatus tendon in a rat model. Conclusions Smoking is associated with RTC tears, shoulder dysfunction, and shoulder symptoms. Smoking may also accelerate RTC degeneration and increase the prevalence of larger RTC tears. These correlations suggest that smoking may increase the risk of symptomatic RTC disease, which could consequently increase the need for surgical interventions. Level of Evidence Level IV, systematic review of Level II through IV studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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49. Return to Activity After Medial Patellofemoral Ligament Repair or Reconstruction.
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Matic, George T., Magnussen, Robert A., Kolovich, Gregory P., and Flanigan, David C.
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Purpose: This study aimed to determine the ability of patients to return to activity after medial patellofemoral ligament (MPFL) reconstruction or repair for patellar instability. Methods: A systematic review was performed using multiple databases. Studies reporting outcomes with Tegner scores after repair or reconstruction of the MPFL were included. Surgical technique, Tegner scores, and episodes of recurrent patellar instability were recorded. Results: Ten articles with a total of 402 patients were included. The mean preoperative Tegner score was 4.7 (2.9 to 7.5). The mean postoperative Tegner score was 5.8 (4.0 to 7.7). Forty-nine patients (12.2%) had a recurrent episode of instability, 11 of whom required additional corrective procedures. There was a statistically significant larger failure rate among those who underwent MPFL repair (26.9%) than those who underwent reconstruction (6.6%) or medial retinacular repair/plication (16.5%). Conclusions: Recurrent dislocation was higher in patients who underwent MPFL repair rather than reconstruction. However, repair and reconstruction had similar Tegner scores. Repair or reconstruction of the soft tissue structures contributing to patellofemoral instability is successful in returning patients to preinjury activity levels. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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50. The Influence of Hamstring Autograft Size on Patient-Reported Outcomes and Risk of Revision After Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction: A Multicenter Orthopaedic Outcomes Network (MOON) Cohort Study.
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Mariscalco, Michael W., Flanigan, David C., Mitchell, Joshua, Pedroza, Angela D., Jones, Morgan H., Andrish, Jack T., Parker, Richard D., Kaeding, Christopher C., and Magnussen, Robert A.
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Purpose: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effect of graft size on patient-reported outcomes and revision risk after anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction. Methods: A retrospective chart review of prospectively collected cohort data was performed, and 263 of 320 consecutive patients (82.2%) undergoing primary ACL reconstruction with hamstring autograft were evaluated. We recorded graft size; femoral tunnel drilling technique; patient age, sex, and body mass index at the time of ACL reconstruction; Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (KOOS) and International Knee Documentation Committee score preoperatively and at 2 years postoperatively; and whether each patient underwent revision ACL reconstruction during the 2-year follow-up period. Revision was used as a marker for graft failure. The relation between graft size and patient-reported outcomes was determined by multiple linear regression. The relation between graft size and risk of revision was determined by dichotomizing graft size at 8 mm and stratifying by age. Results: After we controlled for age, sex, operative side, surgeon, body mass index, graft choice, and femoral tunnel drilling technique, a 1-mm increase in graft size was noted to correlate with a 3.3-point increase in the KOOS pain subscale (P = .003), a 2.0-point increase in the KOOS activities of daily living subscale (P = .034), a 5.2-point increase in the KOOS sport/recreation function subscale (P = .004), and a 3.4-point increase in the subjective International Knee Documentation Committee score (P = .026). Revision was required in 0 of 64 patients (0.0%) with grafts greater than 8 mm in diameter and 14 of 199 patients (7.0%) with grafts 8 mm in diameter or smaller (P = .037). Among patients aged 18 years or younger, revision was required in 0 of 14 patients (0.0%) with grafts greater than 8 mm in diameter and 13 of 71 patients (18.3%) with grafts 8 mm in diameter or smaller. Conclusions: Smaller hamstring autograft size is a predictor of poorer KOOS sport/recreation function 2 years after primary ACL reconstruction. A larger sample size is required to confirm the relation between graft size and risk of revision ACL reconstruction. Level of Evidence: Level III, retrospective comparative study. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2013
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