If it has been decided that you are a candidate for surgery it is important to be both mentally and physically prepared. This includes understanding the injury, the surgery, and the rehabilitation goals.
The initial goals before surgery are to:
Depending on your age, certain preoperative tests will be arranged, such as blood tests, urine tests, chest x-ray, and an EKG
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Leg measurements may be taken to order a knee brace. Your rehabilitation program will be discussed in detail with you.
You will meet the anesthesiologist, who may offer you a choice of anesthesia:
If you have an spinal anesthetic, you can often watch the whole operation on the television monitor.
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Need to Know:
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Need to Know: What to tell your doctor: Be sure to tell your doctor:
Also tell your doctor if you develop any of these symptoms prior to surgery:
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There are a number of different techniques available to repair a torn ACL. Each surgeon has his preference for each particular situation.
In fact we don't talk about ACL "repair" but rather about ACL "reconstruction." This is because a torn ACL cannot simply be repaired by sewing it together again. This was the method tried in the early days of repairing ACL tears, but it was shown to be ineffective. Thus, newer methods were developed which involve reconstructing the ACL ligament, including substituting a new ligament for the damaged one. Using tendons from other parts of the body as a substitute for the ACL was found to be the most effective way of reconstructing the torn ACL. Currently, the two most popular methods in use are using part of the ![]()
Today ACL reconstruction is essentially an arthroscopic procedure, though many surgeons throughout the world still prefer to open the knee. If this route is chosen, depending on how the ACL is repaired, then the incisions may not be very different from those done arthroscopically.
An ![]()
Before actually reconstructing the torn ligament, the surgeon uses the arthroscope to carefully survey the whole joint, looking at and evaluating each key structure. During this portion of the procedure, any additional damage to any of the other knee structures can be identified, and where appropriate, is corrected surgically.
There are a number of choices available to the orthopedic surgeon in determining how best to reconstruct the torn ACL. They all involve a "graft" using something to substitute for the torn ACL.
Each of the available ACL graft tissue choices requires a unique harvesting technique. Furthermore, there are usually different methods used for fixing the grafts in the bone tunnels, depending on the characteristics and properties of the tissue selected. Because of these differences in graft techniques, the type of surgery chosen is frequently made by the surgeon based on his or her experience and comfort level with the chosen technique.
Typically, an ACL reconstruction takes two to two and a half hours. The anesthesia may be general anesthesia or a spinal anesthesia. General anesthesia allows the individual to be asleep through the entire procedure. Spinal anesthesia involves an injection in the back that numbs only the lower body. A medication is also administered with a spinal anesthesia to keep the individual sedated throughout the procedure.
There are several available operative procedures:
1. Patellar tendon graft procedure
Since it was popularized in the mid-1980s, the patellar tendon graft has been the "gold standard" choice for ACL reconstruction. This type of ACL replacement uses the middle third of the person's own patella tendon and is referred to as a bone-tendon-bone (BTB) graft.
In this particular technique,
The patellar tendon graft is tightly secured at the time of the surgery. The knee is stable enough to begin motion and weight-bearing as tolerated, as per the surgeon's instructions.
As healing occurs, the bone tunnels fill in to further secure the tendon ends of the graft in a bone-to-bone relationship. This occurs over the next six to eight weeks.
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Nice to Know: Recent technology has led to the development of specialized absorbable screws that actually dissolve within the bone over two to three years. |
Advantages
Disadvantages
Hamstring reconstruction is an alternative to the bone-patellar-bone graft fixation and is growing in popularity. In this procedure, rather than using the patellar tendon, the surgeon uses the patient's own hamstring tendon, either the semitendinosus or gracilis tendons from the same leg.
There are several variations of this technique. Newer hamstring fixation techniques have been developed to match and even exceed the initial pullout strength of the patellar tendon bone procedure described above. Special screws with threads designed not to cut the hamstring tendons are able to fix the tendon within the bone tunnel, as described with the patellar tendon bone technique.
In younger patients who have torn their ACLs but still have growing bones, the hamstring tendon graft is a good choice because there is less chance of damaging the 'growth plates'- the area responsible for growth of the bone.
Advantages
Disadvantages
Another option is the use of tissue from a cadaver (a deceased person) called an allograft.
Patellar tendon, hamstring tendon, or Achilles tendon allografts can be used as tissues inserted and fixed with the same techniques that are used for autografts (grafts using the individual's own tissue).
Allografts are a good choice when the patient's own tissue availability is limited. They are useful for complicated ligament reconstructions needing more than one graft (for example, if both anterior and posterior cruciate ligaments need to be replaced) or if both the ACL and patellar tendon are damaged.
Advantages
Disadvantages
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Nice to Know: Synthetic grafts Synthetic grafts (i.e., grafts made from other materials) were commonly used in the 1970s but were generally unsuccessful. There are currently no synthetic ligaments in the U.S. approved by the FDA for primary ACL reconstruction. Researchers continue to try and create the perfect ACL replacement. Major requirements of a prosthetic ligament are that it must be strong, matching the compliance of a normal ACL. It must be durable, withstanding high repetitive loads without wear. It also must be perfectly tolerable to the host without bone, joint, or systemic reaction. |
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