Arthroscopy : the journal of arthroscopic & related surgery : official publication of the Arthroscopy Association of North America and the International Arthroscopy Association
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The aim of this dissection study on cadaver and amputated specimens was to determine the position of the infrapatellar nerves in the anterior knee region, and to investigate whether it would be possible to harvest the patellar tendon through two small vertical incisions, leaving the infrapatellar nerves undamaged and the major part of the paratenon intact. The infrapatellar nerve did not pass through the area between the apex of the patella and the tibial tubercle in 1 of 60 specimens. The nerve passed through this area as one branch in 15 of 60 specimens, as two branches in 37 of 60, as three in 6 of 60, and as four in 1 of 60 specimens. ⋯ In 19 of 20 specimens in which the harvesting procedure was performed, the infrapatellar nerve or the nerve branches were undamaged. The length of the undamaged paratenon was 27 mm (+/- 23 mm [2 SD]). This study showed that it was possible to harvest consistent bone-patellar tendon-bone autografts through two vertical 25-mm incisions, leaving the infrapatellar nerve undamaged and the paratenon partially intact in the majority of the cadaver and amputated specimens.
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Three cases of posterior cruciate ligament (PCL) laxity without posterolateral rotatory instability had magnetic resonance imaging scans that documented the structural continuity of the PCL. Tibial PCL recession was effective in eliminating symptomatic laxity in 1 case and lacked efficacy in the other 2 cases.