We reviewed complications after anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction of the knee. From 1977 to 1994, 226 patients, (237 joints) were operated on with ACL reconstruction, in which 177 joints were treated with artificial ligaments. Subjects comprised 122 men and 104 women ranging in age from 13 to 64 years with an average of 26.7 years. Of these 135 patients were followed from 12 to 93 months. The average duration of follow-up was 2 years and 8 months.
We studied the accuracy of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the knee in fifty-six patients who were also examined arthroscopically. The accuracy, sensitivity, and specificity were 96%, 100%, and 95% for medial meniscal tears, and 91%, 67%, and 100 % for lateral meniscal tears respectively. Two MRIs of the medial meniscus were false-positives. These MRI findings were both meniscocapsular separation of the medial meniscus, but the arthroscopic findings were normal. One case was an ACL injury and the other PCL and MCL injury. Hemorrhage and edema of the medial capsule caused by valgus stress at injury may look like a meniscal pseudo-tear on MRI. Five MRIs of the lateral meniscus were false-negatives. All menisci showed normal signal and shape on MRI but traumatic and stable tears of the lateral meniscus were identified arthroscopically. All were associated with ACL tears and lateral condylar bone bruise. The traumatic and stable tear of the meniscus tended to be overlooked on MRI because a meniscus without degeneration shows a normal signal.
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