Background: ACL injuries lead to significant disability among the injured, often requiring surgical reconstruction. Anatomical morphometric analysis helps us identify individuals who are more susceptible to incurring an ACL injury, despite activity modifications, thereby improving quality of life and decreasing the economic burden posed by a potential ACL injury. We explore the relation between morphometric variations in Tibial plateau measured by Medial Tibial plateau slope (MTS), lateral Tibial plateau slope (LTS), Medial Tibial plateau depth (MTD), Tibial eminence height (TEH), Tibial eminence width (TEW) on MRI in association with an ACL tear. Methods: We retrospectively evaluated 269 patients who underwent knee MRI and clinical examination for suspected ACL pathology. Participants were divided into two groups – cases (ACL-injured) and controls (ACL-uninjured) based on MRI and clinical findings suggestive of a complete ACL tear. In both groups, MTS, LTS, MTD, TEH, TEW were calculated. Results: Patients with steeper MTS and LTS and shallower MTD had increased chances of sustaining an ACL injury (p<0.05). Variations in the Tibial eminence morphometrics, however, didn't show any significant association towards increased chances of an ACL injury. Apart from MTD (p<0.05), gender variations in Tibial morphometrics leading to ACL injury were insignificant.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.