Anterior knee laxity measurement: Comparison of passive stress radiographs Telos® and “Lerat”, and GNRB® arthrometer - 05/11/12
Summary |
Introduction |
In patients with anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) tears, anterior laxity can be measured using stress radiographs or more recently introduced electronic measurement devices.
Hypothesis |
The GNRB® arthrometer offers a radiation-free method of measuring anterior knee laxity whose diagnostic value is identical to that of Telos® or Lerat stress radiographs.
Patients and methods |
One hundred and fifty-seven patients (40 years [18–69]) scheduled for knee arthroscopy were evaluated using the GNRB® and two series of stress radiographs of both knees, one obtained using a 250-N Telos® device and the other using the technique described by Lerat (posterior translation of the femur/tibia under a 9-kg loading device). Arthroscopic evaluation of the ACL served as the reference standard for assessing the diagnostic performance of the radiological and instrumental laxity measurements.
Results |
Under arthroscopic examination, the ACL was normal in 50.3%; “healed to roof of the notch” (partial tear) in 9.6%, “posterolateral bundle preserved” (partial tear) in 7.0%, “healed to the posterior cruciate ligament” (PCL) in 17.8%, and “empty notch” (complete tear) in 15.3%. In partial ACL tears, no significant differences in anterior laxity were found across the three measurement techniques. Telos® and GNRB® laxities were greater in the complete-tear group than in the normal-ACL, partial-tear, and healed-to-PCL groups. With the Lerat technique, the only significant differences were between the complete-tear group and the normal-ACL and partial-tear groups. Telos® and GNRB® showed similar diagnostic performance (sensitivity>62%, specificity>75%), whereas the Lerat technique lacked sensitivity (sensitivity=43.2%, specificity=82.7%) at 3mm.
Discussion |
Diagnostic performance was lower in our study than in earlier reports. The GNRB® performed as well as Telos®. The non-irradiating nature of GNRB® assessments allows repeated measurements for therapeutic or diagnostic purposes.
Level of evidence |
Level III, prospective case-control study.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Keywords : Anterior cruciate ligament, Knee laxity measurement, Stress radiographs, Telos®, GNRB®, Knee instability
Plan
Vol 98 - N° 7
P. 744-750 - novembre 2012 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.