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Journal Article

Citation

Sperner G, Benedetto KP, Glötzer W. Aktuelle Traumatol. 1990; 20(3): 162-166.

Vernacular Title

Arthroskopie des traumatischen Hämarthros nach Sportverletzungen. Eine 5-Jahres-Analyse.

Affiliation

Universitätsklinik für Unfallchirurgie Innsbruck.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1990, Georg Thieme Verlag)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

1974118

Abstract

This retrospective study was made to evaluate the significance of different sports activities that cause variable haemarthrosis with intraarticular lesions of the knee joint. Throughout 1984 to 1988 arthroscopy was performed in 337 patients with acute haemarthrosis. The average time between trauma and arthroscopy was 8 days. ACL rupture was diagnosed in most of these cases. Regarding the different types of sport activities ACL lesions were found in skiers (74%), other winter sports (47%), soccer (53%), tennis and squash (58%), athletics (41%) and indoor (61%). Peripheral meniscus tears associated with haemarthrosis were found in 36% and patellar dislocations in 8%. Isolated MCL ruptures were diagnosed clinically and arthroscopy was not performed in these cases. Throughout 1987 isolated ACL ruptures were fixed by reattachment. This technique was not continued any longer and ACL replacement by patellar tendon as bone-ligament-bone was performed routinely since 1988 in those patients, who required surgery. 56 patients required ACL reconstruction following conservative treatment because of ACL deficiency, when they went back to sports activities. Longitudinal peripheral meniscus tears were fixed by the scape in inside-out technique.


Language: de

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