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This clinical trial compared the prognosis of surgical and non-surgical treatment in patients with complete anterior cruciate ligament rupture
Full description
Anterior cruciate ligament injury is a common neuromuscular injury to the knee joint. The incidence rate is gradually increasing. There are 400,000 ACL reconstruction operations in the United States every year. The population of my country is equivalent to 4.3 times that of the United States. The potential economic burden of cruciate ligament reconstruction surgery on the country cannot be ignored. Anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction is seen as an effective treatment for this disease, avoiding secondary meniscus damage and knee degeneration, but the failure rate is still as high as 20%. In addition, problems such as poor bending angle caused by postoperative adhesions that may occur after surgery, atrophy of the quadriceps muscle of the patient's affected leg, and overstrain of the healthy leg caused by psychological factors may affect the quality of life after surgery. Reasons that prevent return to sports. The use of conservative treatment instead of surgery after recent ACL injury has received high attention, and a large number of RCTs have compared the benefits of surgery and conservative treatment.
Some reviews pointed out that the clinical outcomes of surgical treatment and conservative treatment are not much different, and even questioned the prognosis after anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction. Individual differentiated treatment is necessary.
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Inclusion criteria
Age 8-45 years old 2) Complete rupture of unilateral anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) (with/without partial meniscus tear) 3) The history of ACL injury should not be more than 2 months before enrollment 4) Complete rupture of the ACL as determined by clinical examination and MRI 5) Activity level scale 5-9 (Tegner activity score) 6) Degeneration of knee joint <KL II degree, intraoperative cartilage injury < ICRS III degree.
The reason for the rupture of the anterior cruciate ligament is sports trauma.
Complete rupture of the ACL meets the MRI indications: (1) The signal changes, deforms, and thickens on imaging, and is completely broken but not separated; (2) There is no sagging and separation of the broken ends; (3) The synovial image is continuous.
The physical examination of complete ACL rupture meets the following indications: (1) Lachman (-) or ADT (-) has one of them; (2) or both are slightly loose, and the slack is not more than 10mm; (3) vertical Leg position ADT (-) or slack <5mm.
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120 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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