Revision ACL Reconstruction Principles
Prevalence of ACL Reconstructions
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ACL reconstruction rate in the U.S.: 74.6 per 100,000 people
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Positive outcomes in 75%–97% of cases
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Higher graft rupture rates seen in patients under 20 years old
Consequences of ACL Deficiency
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Knee instability
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Restricted range of motion
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Increased risk of meniscal injuries
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Progression to degenerative joint disease
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Arthritis development
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Limitations in physical activity
Causes of Graft Failure
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MARS study: Multiple causes in 37% of revision cases
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Traumatic re-injury: Most common single cause (32%)
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Technical errors: Account for 24%
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Biological issues: Contribute to 7%
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Common technical errors:
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Misplaced tunnels (most significant)
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Incorrect or failed hardware
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Undetected limb malalignment
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Tunnel Malpositioning Effects
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Anterior femoral tunnel: Causes graft over-tension, limited flexion, potential failure
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Vertical femoral tunnel: Preserves AP stability, reduces rotational control
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Tibial tunnel issues:
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Anterior placement: Impingement during extension
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Posterior placement: Graft laxity in flexion, possible PCL impingement
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Additional Risk Factors for Graft Failure
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Fixation issues:
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Critical to maintain graft tension
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Bone-tendon-bone: Can fail at bone interface or screw pull-out
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Soft-tissue: Susceptible to fastener misplacement or tension problems
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Unaddressed issues during primary surgery:
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Posterior tibial slope >12° or varus alignment = increased graft stress
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Missed injuries (posterolateral/posteromedial corners, medial meniscus) raise failure risk
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Types of Traumatic Graft Failure
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Early-stage: Before graft incorporation
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Late-stage: Post-return to activity
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Early ROM-focused physiotherapy is encouraged
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Avoid aggressive strengthening exercises
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Osteolysis >15 mm requires bone grafting prior to revision
Preoperative Considerations
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Evaluate need for staged vs. concomitant procedures
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Address limb alignment to avoid graft stress
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Corrective procedures:
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Posterior tibial slope: Anterior closing wedge osteotomy
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Varus: High tibial osteotomy (HTO)
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Valgus: Lateral opening wedge distal femoral osteotomy or medial closing wedge DFO
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Single-Stage vs. Two-Stage Revision
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Decision depends on:
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Tunnel integrity and placement options
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Presence of tunnel osteolysis or conflict
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Single-stage indications:
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Tunnel osteolysis <15 mm
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No severe malalignment or motion deficits
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Resolved infections
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Motion deficits to address:
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20° flexion loss or >5° extension loss must be treated pre-revision
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Surgical Technique Overview
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Initial Arthroscopy:
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Assess tunnel positioning and joint condition
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Check for cartilage damage, meniscal tears, loose bodies
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Single-Stage Revision Procedure
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Debridement of previous graft
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Expose tunnels clearly
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Remove interfering hardware only
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Tunnel overlap not a contraindication—requires stable fixation strategy
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Options for tunnel management:
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Bone graft or substitute
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Immediate re-drilling
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Avoid stacking interference screws
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If fixation is compromised, convert to two-stage revision
Two-Stage Revision Procedure
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Purpose: Restore bone stock and prepare for new tunnels
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Remove all hardware
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Ream and graft tunnels with allograft (chips or dowels)
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Dowels rehydrated with sterile saline; matched to reamer size
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Wait 3–6 months for bone integration
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Confirm integration with X-ray or CT
Graft & Fixation Choices
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Autograft: Lower failure rates, better outcomes per some reviews
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Harvesting options:
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Prefer ipsilateral
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Use contralateral if ipsilateral is not viable
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Fixation:
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Use interference screws when bone stock allows
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Suspensory/extracortical fixation as alternatives
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Extraarticular Supplementation
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ALC (anterolateral complex) critical for rotational control
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Injuries to ALC common with ACL tears
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Augmentation options:
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LET or anterolateral ligament reconstruction
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Useful in:
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Patients <25 years
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Multiple revisions
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High-risk rotational sports
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Preferred technique: Modified Lemaire (iliotibial band tenodesis)
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Caution: Risk of over-constraining the joint
Postoperative Rehabilitation
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Weight-bearing:
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Immediate if isolated ACL revision
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Delayed if combined with osteotomy/meniscal/cartilage procedures
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Early rehab:
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Heel slides, quadriceps sets, ROM exercises
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Strength phase (~6 weeks):
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Closed chain exercises to build muscle safely
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Return to Sports:
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Expected in 9–12 months
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Based on strength, tolerance, and overall recovery
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Outcomes
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Generally inferior to primary ACL reconstructions
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Grassi et al: Revision ACLs scored 7.8 points lower (Lysholm scale)
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Mohan et al: 6% failure rate in revision ACLs
Future Directions
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Improved tunnel management
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Fast-setting bone graft substitutes
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Accelerated second-stage procedures
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Expanded use of LET in high-risk cases
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Posterior tibial slope correction gaining recognition as key to reducing graft failure risk
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