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Orthop J Sports Med · Aug 2017
Do Tibial Plateau Fractures Worsen Outcomes of Knee Ligament Injuries? A Matched Cohort Analysis.
- Mark E Cinque, Jonathan A Godin, Gilbert Moatshe, Jorge Chahla, Bradley M Kruckeberg, Jonas Pogorzelski, and Robert F LaPrade.
- Steadman Philippon Research Institute, Vail, Colorado, USA.
- Orthop J Sports Med. 2017 Aug 1; 5 (8): 2325967117723895.
BackgroundTibial plateau fractures account for a small portion of all fractures; however, these fractures can pose a surgical challenge when occurring concomitantly with ligament injuries.Purpose/HypothesisThe purpose of this study was to compare 2-year outcomes of soft tissue reconstruction with or without a concomitant tibial plateau fracture and open reduction internal fixation. We hypothesized that patients with a concomitant tibial plateau fracture at the time of soft tissue surgery would have inferior outcomes compared with patients without an associated tibial plateau fracture.Study DesignCohort study; Level of evidence, 3.MethodsForty patients were included in this study: 8 in the fracture group and 32 in the matched control group. Inclusion criteria for the fracture group included patients who were at least 18 years old at the time of surgery and sustained a tibial plateau fracture and a concomitant injury of the anterior cruciate ligament, posterior cruciate ligament, medial collateral ligament, or fibular collateral ligament in isolation or any combination of cruciate or collateral ligaments and who subsequently underwent isolated or combined ligament reconstruction. Patients were excluded if they underwent prior ipsilateral knee surgery, sustained additional bony injuries, or sustained an isolated extra-articular ligament injury at the time of injury. Each patient with a fracture was matched with 4 patients from a control group who had no evidence of a tibial plateau fracture but underwent the same soft tissue reconstruction procedure.ResultsPatients in the fracture group improved significantly from preoperatively to postoperatively with respect to Short Form-12 (P < .05) and Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index total scores (P < .05). The Lysholm (P = .075) and Tegner scores (P = .086) also improved, although this was not statistically significant. Patients in the control group improved significantly from preoperatively to postoperatively across all measured scores. A comparison of the postoperative results between the 2 groups showed no statistically significant difference.ConclusionThe presence of a tibial plateau fracture in conjunction with a ligamentous knee injury did not have a negative effect on postoperative patient-reported outcomes. Patient-reported outcome scores after surgery in both the fracture and control groups improved beyond the minimally clinically important difference, indicating that the presence of a fracture did not detract from the outcomes observed in patients without fractures undergoing concomitant ligament reconstruction.
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