The ‘Other’ Cruciate Ligament: Newer Treatments for PCL Tears
New study reports on posterior cruciate
ligament treatment options, but investigation is
not over
Rosemont, IL
While major advances have been made in the understanding of
posterior cruciate ligament (PCL) anatomy and
reconstruction, a literature review published in the July 2009
issue of the Journal of the
American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons (JAAOS) finds that
there must be continued advances in basic science research in
order to determine the best course of treatment for those with
PCL injuries.
“An ACL (anterior
cruciate ligament) tear is an injury of instability; a PCL
tear is an injury of disability,” said study author Matthew
Matava, MD, Associate Professor, Department of Orthopedic
Surgery, Washington University School of Medicine, in
Chesterfield, Missouri. “With a PCL injury, your knee won’t
buckle on you tomorrow, but in a few months or years it may
become painful and not as strong or stable as it was prior to
the injury. PCL tears are less frequently discussed because they
are often left undiagnosed and the patient does not seek
treatment for what they assumed was a mild injury.”
PCL injuries are assessed by grades:
- Grade 1: Partial tear (non-surgical treatment options
recommended)
- Grade 2: Isolated, near complete tear (non-surgical
treatment options recommended)
- Grade 3: Complete PCL torn, with other ligament injuries
(surgery often recommended, but not always)
Two newer surgical options, along with one traditional
method, are currently used to treat Grade 3 injuries:
- Traditional: One-bundle bone graft passed through a
tunnel in the tibia (shin bone). One-bundle grafts are made
thicker than two-bundle grafts, but may not be as effective
because they attach at a single point.
- Newer: Two-bundle graft (studied for the past 10 years).
Two-bundle grafts use thinner individual grafts, but their
total graft volume is thicker. They may be more effective
than one-bundle grafts because they attach at two different
points.
- Newer: Inlay reconstruction is an approach whereby a
graft is screwed into the back of the tibia avoiding a
tunnel through the front of the tibia.
According to Dr. Matava, basic science data suggests that
it is favorable to use a two-bundle graft over a one-bundle
graft, and that an inlay reconstruction is preferable to a
graft passing through a tibial tunnel. Inlay reconstruction
is different, he says, because the graft does not get
stretched around the tibial tunnel and is prevented from
stretching out and/or fraying.
“I like this procedure because I have had improved
results compared to prior patients of mine that underwent
the traditional method with the graft placed through the
tibial tunnel,” said Dr. Matava. “Additionally, there is
biomechanical evidence that the benefits I have noticed are
real.” There have not been any randomized prospective
studies to date, however, comparing the two methods.
Some orthopaedic surgeons, however, believe these
procedures are more complicated and therefore more risky;
they also disagree on how much tension to use on the graft.
If a patient has a PCL injury, the orthopaedic surgeon
should first determine the level of injury in order to
decide on the best treatment option. Because PCL surgery is
technically challenging, a patient needing surgery should
seek out an orthopaedic surgeon with experience performing
PCL reconstructions.
“Although we believe the newer treatments are better, we
still must prove it,” said Dr. Matava. “In order to do that,
we must continue with our research, and follow patients over
the course of several years to determine whether their
treatments were successful.”
About the PCL
The PCL is a ligament that prevents the shin bone from
moving backwards, and PCL injuries occur most frequently in
individuals involved in motor vehicle accidents when the
knee is bent and the shin forcefully strikes the dashboard.
Athletes also experience PCL tears when they fall on the
front of their knee, causing it to bend back.
Injuries to the PCL should not be confused with ACL
injuries. Nearly 200,000 ACL surgeries are performed in the
U.S. each year; PCL surgeries are estimated to be
approximately 20 times less common.
Disclosure: Matthew Matava, MD or a member of his
immediate family serves as a paid consultant to or is an
employee of ISTO Technologies and Schwartz Biomedical, and
has received research or institutional support from Breg.
Neither of the other authors of the study or a member of
their immediate families has received anything of value from
or owns stock in a commercial company or institution related
directly or indirectly to the subject of this article: Evan
Ellis, MD and Brian Gruber, MD.
Reprinted by permission from
http://www6.aaos.org/news/pemr/releases/release.cfm?releasenum=813
