The Gross Morphology of Torn Human Anterior Cruciate Ligaments in Unstable Knees

1999 
Abstract Summary: To evaluate the presence and incidence of reattachments of torn human anterior cruciate ligaments (ACL), we prospectively investigated 101 patients undergoing arthroscopic ACL reconstruction to study the intra-articular morphology of ACLs under circumstances in which functional healing had failed. Results showed that roughly 72% of these unstable knees had reattachment of the torn ACL to the posterior cruciate ligament (PCL). Eighteen percent had no signs of ACL reattachment but only 2% of previously torn ACLs were absent. These results suggest that even in chronic situations in which the knee remains functionally unstable, human ACLs rarely resorb. It also suggests that torn human ACLs commonly reattach in the knee, mainly to the PCL via a process that is consistent with scarring. While the function of these reattachments is clearly inadequate in people with unstable knees because of a combination of reattachment location, scar quantity, or quality, these results nonetheless show that the intra-articular environment in humans often maintains ACL stumps and it is not totally inhibitory to ACL reattachment via some biological process. Arthroscopy: The Journal of Arthroscopic and Related Surgery, Vol 15, No 3 (April), 1999: pp 301–306
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