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ANTERIOR CRUCIATE LIGAMENT TEAR FOLLOWING SURGICAL TREATMENT OF PEDIATRIC TIBIAL EMINENCE FRACTURE IN A MULTICENTER COHORT

Authors :
R. Justin Mistovich
Ryan O'Donnell
Jason Jagodzinski
Steven L. Bokshan
Indranil Kushare
R. Jay Lee
Julien T. Aoyama
Peter D. Fabricant
Theodore J. Ganley
Daniel W. Green
Henry B. Ellis
Yi-Meng Yen
Brant Sachleben
Jason Rhodes
Gregory A. Schmale
Neeraj M. Patel
Aristides I. Cruz
Kelsey Brown
Scott D. McKay
Catherine Sargent
Source :
Orthopaedic Journal of Sports Medicine
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2021.

Abstract

Background: While operative treatment of displaced pediatric tibial eminence fractures has generally been shown to be safe, post-operative complications including arthrofibrosis, infection, fixation failure, and postoperative ipsilateral ACL injuries remain prevalent. The purpose of this study was to describe the prevalence of and risk factors for post-operative ACL tears in a cohort of patients surgically treated for tibial eminence fracture. Methods: We performed a retrospective review of children undergoing treatment of a tibial eminence fracture at 10 tertiary children’s hospitals.. The primary outcome was subsequent ACL rupture. Patients with 2 year follow up data and those that had met the primary outcome within the 2 year period, were analyzed for demographics, risk factors and survival analyses Results: 385 pediatric patients were reviewed. Overall, 46 patients had either 2 year follow up data or met the primary outcome measure of an ACL tear prior to the 2 year mark. Mean age was 11.2 years old (SD 2.8), and the median follow time was 36.4 months (SD 17.7 months) There was a 21.7% incidence of subsequent ACL tear in the cohort analyzed. Subsequent ACL tears occurred at a median of 10.2 months (SD 19.5 months) postoperatively. There was a statistically significant association with higher Myers & McKeever grade tibial spine fractures (Type III and IV) and subsequent ACL rupture ( p=0.006). Subsequent ACL tears occurred in patients who were older when they had their original tibial eminence fracture, 13.4 years old versus 11.3 years old ( p=0.035). There was no statistically significant relationship between ipsilateral ACL tear and body mass index, operative time, fixation method used, postoperative weight bearing status, type of postoperative immobilization, contact versus non-contact injury mechanism, type of post-operative physical therapy protocol based on chi-squared or t-test ( p>0.05). Conclusion: Subsequent ipsilateral ACL tears following operatively treated pediatric tibial eminence fractures in a large multicenter cohort occurred at a rate of 21.7%. They were associated with completely displaced (Type III or IV) tibial eminence fractures, and older patients. Clinicians should therefore continue to follow patients for at least 2 years after treatment of pediatric tibial eminence fractures in order to track this potential complication. [Table: see text]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23259671
Volume :
9
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Orthopaedic Journal of Sports Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7f7bb85a77b1e0942e9a4da8dd1ace22