Macroscopic and microscopic findings of multi-folded hamstring grafts of anatomical double-bundle ACL reconstruction 13 years after surgery.
Daiki KumakiKeiji TenshoMai IwayaTomoya IwaasaKazushige YoshidaSuguru KoyamaHiroki ShimodairaHiroshi HoriuchiJun TakahashiPublished in: Knee surgery, sports traumatology, arthroscopy : official journal of the ESSKA (2022)
A 49-year-old woman underwent anatomic double-bundle anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction using a hamstring tendon. Due to knee osteoarthritis progression, total knee arthroplasty was performed 13 years after the surgery. The anteromedial (AM) bundle was composed partly of tendon-like tissue and partly of scar-like tissue. In the tendon-like part of the AM bundle, the collagen fibers were slightly loose and showed a low-frequency crimp structure with an ovoid cell shape. In contrast, the collagen arrangement in the scar-like part was irregular, edematous, and sparsely cell-dense, with an ovoid cell shape. The posterolateral bundles were generally composed of spindle-shaped cells, and the collagen was arranged in tight cohesion and had well-demarcated bundles with normal crimping. Within the tibial tunnel, the graft was mainly connected to the surrounding lamellar bone on the posterior sides, with sparser connections on the anterior and medial/lateral side. The findings of this long-term case provide valuable information to enable understanding of multiple-folded hamstring tendons.Level of evidence V.
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