Arthroscopic-Assisted Coracoclavicular Ligament Reconstruction: Clinical Outcomes and Return to Activity at Mean 6-Year Follow-Up

Joseph D. Lamplot, Sarav S. Shah, Justin M. Chan, Kyle J. Hancock, Joseph Gentile, Scott A. Rodeo, Answorth A. Allen, Riley J. Williams, David W. Altchek, David M. Dines, Russell F. Warren, Frank A. Cordasco, Lawrence V. Gulotta, Joshua S. Dines

Résultat de rechercheexamen par les pairs

12 Citations (Scopus)

Résumé

Purpose: To report clinical and functional outcomes including return to preinjury activity level following arthroscopic-assisted coracoclavicular (CC) ligament reconstruction (AA-CCR) and to determine associations between return to preinjury activity level, radiographic outcomes, and patient-reported outcomes following AA-CCR. Methods: A institutional registry review of all AA-CCR using free tendon grafts from 2007 to 2016 was performed. Clinical assessment included Single Assessment Numeric Evaluation (SANE) score and return to preinjury activity level at final follow-up. Treatment failure was defined as (1) revision acromioclavicular stabilization surgery, (2) unable to return to preinjury activity level, or (3) radiographic loss of reduction (RLOR, >25% CC distance compared with contralateral side). SANE scores, return to activity, and RLOR were compared between patients within each category of treatment failure, by grade of injury, and whether concomitant pathology was treated. Results: There were 88 patients (89.8% male) with mean age of 39.6 years and minimum 2-year clinical follow-up (mean 6.1 years). Most injuries were Rockwood grade V (63.6%). Mean postoperative SANE score was 86.3 ± 17.5. Treatment failure occurred in 17.1%: 8.0% were unable to return to activity, 5.7% had RLOR, and 3.4% underwent revision surgery due to traumatic reinjury. SANE score was lower among patients who were unable to return to activity compared with those with RLOR and compared with nonfailures (P =.0002). There were no differences in revision surgery rates, return to activity, or SANE scores according to Rockwood grade or if concomitant pathology was treated. Conclusions: AA-CCR with free tendon grafts resulted in good clinical outcomes and a high rate of return to preinjury activity level. RLOR did not correlate with return to preinjury activity level. Concomitant pathology that required treatment did not adversely affect outcomes. Return to preinjury activity level may be a more clinically relevant outcome measure than radiographic maintenance of acromioclavicular joint reduction. Level of Evidence: IV (Case Series).

Langue d'origineEnglish
Pages (de-à)1086-1095.e1
JournalArthroscopy - Journal of Arthroscopic and Related Surgery
Volume37
Numéro de publication4
DOI
Statut de publicationPublished - avr. 2021

Financement

Bailleurs de fondsNuméro du bailleur de fonds
Gramercy Extremity Orthopedics
Ortho RTI
Wolters Kluwer Health-Lippincott Williams & Wilkins
American Association of Orthopaedic Surgeons
Arthrex
American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons

    ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

    • Orthopedics and Sports Medicine

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