Stability tests in knee ligament injuries
β Scribed by R. Sandberg; B. Balkfors; A. Henricson; N. Westlin
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1986
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 213 KB
- Volume
- 106
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1434-3916
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
For 182 knee joints with ligamentous injuries confirmed at surgery the records contained a complete and documented stability examination. In anterior cruciate ligament injuries the Lachman test and the anterior drawer sign were of similar value with regard to the frequency of false negatives - they missed half of the injuries - but their accuracy improved when they were repeated under anesthesia. The pivot shift was useful only under anesthesia. The medial collateral ligament injuries were usually detected because of valgus instability, also without anesthesia. The stability tests done with the patient under anesthesia are sufficiently reliable for making decisions about knee ligament surgery.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
The total injury experience for a ski season at Jackson Hole, Wyoming indicates that 24% of all patient visits were for ligamentous injuries to the knee. First degree sprains of the medial collateral ligament predominated, with 61.5% of all knee sprains occurring on the left side. Heavy, deep, unpac
## Abstract The purpose of this study was to develop a method to prospectively quantify passive knee stability in an animal model of joint injury over time. Knee stability is defined here as the amount of translation or rotation of the tibia relative to the femur for a given application of force or