A previous report demonstrated 96.8% healing within 1 yr after apical surgery was performed with the surgical operating microscope and Super-EBA as the root-end filling material. The purpose of this paper is to report on the long-term follow-up of those cases that were considered healed at the short term. Clinical examinations were made and radiographs were evaluated 5 to 7 yr after the case had first been considered healed. Criteria for determining healed cases were the same as those used in the first report. Of the 59 roots evaluated, 54 (91.5%) remained healed, whereas 5 (8.5%) showed evidence of apical deterioration.
Thirty-nine subjects volunteered for this blinded, randomized, and controlled study to assess the clinical examination skills of orthopaedic surgeons with fellowship training in sports medicine. Eighteen of the patients had 19 chronic isolated posterior cruciate ligament tears. The controls were 9 patients with 9 anterior cruciate ligament-deficient knees, 12 subjects with normal knees, and the contralateral normal knees of the ligament-deficient patients. To eliminate preexamination bias, all examiners were blinded from the examinee's history, identity, and diagnosis. The overall clinical examination accuracy for all orthopaedic surgeons was 96%. The accuracy for detecting a posterior cruciate ligament tear was 96%, with a 90% sensitivity and a 99% specificity. The examination accuracy was higher for grade II and III posterior laxity than for grade I laxity. Eighty-one percent of the time, the examiners agreed on the grade of the posterior cruciate ligament tear for any given patient. The posterior drawer test, which included palpation of the tibia-femur step-off, was the most sensitive and specific clinical test. A thorough and precise physical examination, coupled with a patient history, can be considered diagnostic in the majority of isolated posterior cruciate ligament injuries. With this accuracy level known, the natural history of isolated posterior cruciate ligament tears can be reliably documented and studied.
To distinguish between morbidity caused by the isolated patellar tendon graft harvest and morbidity associated with anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction when the graft is harvested from the involved knee, we studied 20 patients who had an isolated contralateral graft harvest for anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction in the opposite knee. We defined and quantitated the morbidity by evaluating the uninjured knee from preoperative studies to current followup (range, 0.5 to 5 years; average, 2 years). All graft harvest surgeries were performed in an identical fashion. Rehabilitation of the harvest knee included immediate range of motion, weightbearing, and closed chain kinetic exercises with a emphasis on early strengthening. All patients regained full knee range of motion by 3 weeks. At final followup, there was no clinical or radiographic evidence of patella contracture or baja. Quadriceps strength averaged 69% at 6 weeks and returned to 93% at 1 year and 95% at 2 years. Activity-related soreness at the donor site (patellar tendinitis) was rarely restricting and resolved after the 1st year. No patient complained of patellofemoral joint pain in the donor knee. The modified Noyes subjective questionnaire score averaged 97 of 100 at last followup. The morbidity of an isolated autogenous patellar tendon graft harvest appears to be of short duration and largely reversible.
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