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Inclusion of open injuries in an updated Schenck classification of knee dislocations based on a global Delphi consensus study

Authors :
Michael Held
Waldo Scheepers
Richard von Bormann
Daniel C. Wascher
Dustin L. Richter
Robert C. Schenck
Christopher D. Harner
Hasan Alizayagam
Carlos Mourao
Diogo Mesquita
Soliudeen Arojuraye
Ednei Freitas
Rtesh Patel
S. Deepak
Fernanda Nahas
Paulo Fontes
Gabriel M. Miura
Gian Du Preez
Guilherme F. Simoes
Leandro Marinho
Roberto Cunha Luciano
Yogesh Gowda
Bernardo Ribeiro
David North
Constantino Calapodopulos
Dustin Richter
Ennio Coutinho
Weili Fu
Frederico Ferreira
Clauco Passos
Hannes Jonker
Hayden Hobbs
John Grant
Sebastian Magobotha
Marcos Alves
Marcelo Amorim
Marcelo Denaro
Marc Safran
Marcelo Moraes
Dinshaw Pardiwala
Rodrigo Lazzarini
Seth Sherman
Saseendar Shanmugasundaram
Sundararajan Silvampatti
Wagner Lemos
Jose M. Juliano Eustaquio
Peter Venter
Source :
Journal of ISAKOS : joint disordersorthopaedic sports medicine.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Knee dislocations (KDs) are complex injuries defined as incongruity of the tibiofemoral joint, which leads to tears of two or more of the main stabilising knee ligaments, and they are often associated with damage to surrounding soft tissue or neurovascular structures. A classification system for these injuries should be simple and reproducible and allow communication among surgeons for surgical planning and outcome prediction. The aim of this study was to formulate a list of factors, prioritised by high-volume knee surgeons, that should be included in a KD classification system.A global panel of orthopaedic knee surgery specialists participated in a Delphi process. The first survey employed 91 orthopaedic surgeons to generate a list of patient- and system-specific factors that should be included in a KD classification system that may affect surgical planning and outcomes. This list was subsequently prioritised by 27 identified experts (mean 15.3 years of experience) from Brazil (n = 9), USA (n = 6), South Africa (n = 4), India (n = 4), China (n = 2), and the United Kingdom (n = 2). The items were analysed to find factors that had at least 70% consensus for inclusion in a classification system.Of the 12 factors identified, four (33%) achieved at least 70% consensus for inclusion in a classification system. The factors deemed critical for inclusion in a classification system included vascular injuries (89%), common peroneal nerve injuries (78%), number of torn ligaments (78%), and open injuries (70%).Consensus for inclusion of various factors in a KD classification system was not easily achieved. The wide geographic distribution of participants provides diverse insight and makes the results of the study globally applicable. The most important factors to include in a classification system as determined by the Delphi technique were vascular injuries, common peroneal nerve injuries, number of torn ligaments, and open injuries. To date, the Schenck anatomic classification system most accurately identifies these patient variables with the addition of open injury classification. The authors propose to update the Schenck classification system with the inclusion of open injuries as an additional modifier, although this is only a small step in updating the classification, and further studies should evaluate the inclusion of more advanced imaging modalities. Future research should focus on integrating these factors into useful existing classification systems that are predictive of surgical treatment and patient outcomes.

Details

ISSN :
20597762
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of ISAKOS : joint disordersorthopaedic sports medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f6bef4a5c3a8174aa900540a6fdc7764