The present invention relates to ligament grafts, and in particular to the control of tension in ligament grafts. It has application in anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) grafts as well as grafts of other ligaments.
The need for a technique that allows post-fixation ligament graft re-tensioning after ACL, or other ligament, reconstruction is indicated by clinical observation of excessive anterior laxity in the immediate and early postoperative period in some people who undergo knee surgery. This may occur in cases where grafts are secured in both femur and tibia by interference screws. The causes may include viscoelastic graft stretching and fixation failure. In this context it is postulated that the graft loses its tendon characteristics and undergoes ‘ligamentization’. Mechanically this process is associated with a loss of initial tensile graft strength and increased susceptibility to creep. Soft tissue grafts may also slip past their fixation under cyclic loading. In addition, it is possible that there will be inadequate graft tension at the end of the surgical procedure due to technical reasons such as inadequate tibial reduction during graft fixation.
Re-tensioning procedures described in the art, other than thermal graft shrinkage, have historically always involved a revision of graft fixation; procedures such as removal and replacement of interference screws may damage the graft. Consequently, increased antero-posterior laxity is often accepted to avoid the sequelae of ACL revision.
ACL re-tensioning is theoretically feasible before graft incorporation into the bone tunnel has taken place. Little is known about the exact time it takes for secure soft tissue graft-tunnel osseointegration to occur. Reported timescales of 3 to 26 weeks have been based on animal models, but it is unclear whether this data represents the human situation. Time from surgery to graft osseointegration with interference screw fixation is believed to be in the region 6-15 weeks. Graft-femoral tunnel histology of knees with suspensory fixation or cross-pin fixation 9 to 11 weeks post-surgery showed a continuous soft-tissue envelope and only loose attachment between graft and bone [Nebelung et al., Arch. Orthop. Trauma Surg. 123: 158-163]. Hence, the time limit post-surgery for moving a tendon graft along a bone tunnel remains unclear.
The present invention provides a graft fixation device for fixing a ligament graft to a bone, the device comprising a locating means for locating the device in the bone and a graft support means arranged to support the graft, wherein the graft support means is adjustable to provide adjustment of the position of the graft relative to the bone.
The graft support means may be arranged to be rotated to provide the adjustment. Alternatively it may be arranged to slide axially of the device, or to move radially of the device in the direction transverse to the device to provide the adjustment.
The graft support means may be formed integrally with the locating means so that both portions can be rotated together to provide the adjustment. In this case the graft support means and the locating means may comprise respective portions of the device. The graft support portion may, in this case, be adjusted by adjusting the position of the whole of the device. Alternatively the graft support means may be formed separately so that it moves relative to the locating means.
The device may further comprise locking means arranged to lock the graft support portion in any of at least two positions. The locking means may be arranged to lock the locating portion in position relative to the bone, which can lock the graft support portion if the two portions are fixed or locked relative to each other.
The locating means may be of substantially circular cross section having a central axis about which it can be rotated, and the graft support portion may be rotationally asymmetric about the axis so that its movement about the axis produces the adjustment. For example the graft support portion may be offset from the axis, to form a crank. Alternatively the graft support portion may have a rotationally asymmetric shape, for example triangular or elongate in cross section, so that it acts as a cam which provides the adjustment when rotated.
The device may further comprise a further locating means, the graft support means being located, at least partly, between the two locating means whereby the locating means are arranged to locate the device in the bone on opposite sides of a tunnel in the bone.
The present invention further provides a method of fixing a ligament graft to a bone, the method comprising providing a graft fixing having a locating means and a graft support means, locating the locating means in the bone, supporting the ligament graft on the graft support means, and adjusting the support means thereby to adjust the position of the graft relative to the bone.
The method may further comprise fixing the ligament graft, typically the opposite end of the graft, to another bone, and the adjustment be performed after that fixing has been performed so that the graft tension is adjusted after it has been fixed at both ends.
Embodiments of the invention can provide a novel means for post-fixation graft re-tensioning that is minimally invasive, easily accomplished and strictly extra-articular. Graft strain or damage at the anchor interface may be minimized.
Double looped semitendinosus and gracilis ACL grafts in conjunction with femoral cross pin fixation offer good biomechanical and clinical performance [Clark et al., Arthroscopy 14:258-267 and Kousa et al., Am. J. Sports Med. 31: 174-181]. Some embodiments of this invention are based on these established principles, but some feature a novel crank mechanism. In such embodiments the graft loop rests directly on the crank. Crankshaft rotation raises or lowers the loop within the femoral tunnel prior to the graft adhering permanently to the bone. At the time of graft fixation the cross-pin crank mechanism is positioned distally in the femoral tunnel. If graft post-operative re-tensioning is required, rotation of the crankshaft pulls the proximal end of the graft to a maximum at the opposing crank “crank up” position leading to significant reduction of excessive anterior-posterior (AP) laxity following ACL reconstruction. It has been shown previously that pulling the graft through the tunnel by adjusting its fixation increases graft tension and decreases AP knee laxity [Amis, J. Bone Joint Surg. Br. 71: 819-824].
Preferred embodiments of the invention can address the need for a technique that allows graft re-tensioning without undoing the femoral or tibial fixation, i.e. avoiding a revision procedure. The intervention of re-tensioning they provide can be simple, extra-articular and have minimal or no effect on graft integrity.
Preferred embodiments of the present invention will now be described by way of example only with reference to the accompanying drawings.
a is partially cut-away front view of a knee joint showing the device of
b is a scrap section of the joint of
a is partially cut-away side view of the knee joint of
b is a scrap section of the joint of
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a and 7a show the anchor pin 10 in the down position, which is how it is first inserted. If the graft needs to be tightened, the pin 10 can then be rotated so that the graft supporting portion 20 moves upwards, hence pulling the graft along the graft tunnel 62 up into the femur, and locked in place.
Frozen cadaver knees with a mean age of 68.5 years, range 56-81, were used. Specimens were approximately 15 cm long above and below the joint line, and were sealed in polyethylene bags and stored at −20° C. After thawing the knees were dissected preserving only bone, joint, menisci, joint capsule and ligaments. The cut ends of the tibia and femur were cast into steel tubes using polymethylmethacrylate bone cement to provide stable fixation while testing.
Fresh frozen bovine extensor tendons were used as ACL grafts. These were harvested and trimmed into 5×200 mm long strips. Bovine extensor tendon grafts were used because their biomechanical properties are similar to human hamstring grafts. The reconstruction protocol used, including tunnel placement, tunnel orientation, magnitude of pretension force and degree of flexion at fixation was based on the ESSKA 1996 consensus workshop [Amis, Knee Surg. Sports Traumatol. Arthrosc. 6 Suppl 1:S2-12]. Other aspects of this work, such as the effects of freezing osseo-ligamentous specimens and laxity testing in a materials testing machine, are well-accepted in the literature [Arnoczky et al., J. Bone Jt. Surg. 64 A: 217-224]. Doubled upon itself each graft passed through a 10 mm diameter sizer. Whipstitches were applied to each end and the grafts were pre-conditioned by applying a tensioning force of 50N for 30 minutes.
After clearing ACL remnants a 10 mm/60° tibial tunnel was drilled exiting in the centre of the tibial attachment, using a 60° tibial drill guide (DePuy®, Johnson & Johnson®, Leeds, England). With the knee at 90° flexion, a 10×35 mm femoral tunnel was created at the 10:30 or 1:30 position respectively using a 5 mm transtibial offset femoral drill guide (Acufex®, Smith & Nephew Inc®, MA, USA). Using the Arthrex 90° c-arm and Transfix® instruments (Arthrex Inc., Naples, Fla., USA), a guidewire was placed through the femoral condyles, perpendicular to the femoral tunnel and through the tunnel hook fenestration. Over-drilling created a transverse 8 or 10 mm tunnel through the lateral femoral condyle which opened into the femoral tunnel. After exchanging the guidewire for a flexible wire the tunnel hook was withdrawn from the femoral tunnel, delivering a loop of flexible wire trans-tibially. The graft was doubled over the wire loop and pulled up into the femoral tunnel by opposing tension on the flexible wire ends.
The adjustable ACL fixation device was inserted by sliding it over the taut flexible guide wire through the graft loop and beyond the femoral tunnel into cancellous bone. Complete insertion was achieved once the thick proximal part of the crankshaft abutted against the graft loop. With the distal graft end held under tension alternating rotation of the crankshaft produced detectable shortening and elongation of the graft and ensured that the graft loop had settled in its correct position on the crank. Knees were reconstructed with a femoral anchor 10 mm in diameter with 8 mm between opposing crank positions.
The knees were preconditioned with 20 flexion-extension cycles. The distal graft ends were cemented into a metal tube which itself was linked via a load cell assembly to an external tibial post. With this set-up graft pre-tension could be adjusted. Knees underwent preconditioning and graft pre-tensioning with 40 N at 20° flexion for 30 minutes.
Antero-posterior laxity was tested using an Instron 1122 materials testing machine, (Instron Co., High Wycombe, UK). The femur was mounted in a stationary fixture on the base of the test machine angled to give either 20° or 90° knee flexion. The tibia was mounted horizontally in a fixture attached to the loadcell of the test machine, that was on the moveable crosshead. Thus, moving the crosshead upwards caused an anterior tibial translation (draw), representing either the Lachmann or anterior draw tests. The tibial fixture included linear bearings to allow secondary medial-lateral and proximal-distal translation movements, plus rotary bearings for secondary internal-external and varus-valgus rotations.
Prior to taking any measurements in each testing setup, the knee was subjected to 15 cycles of AP tibial displacement, between load limits of +/−150N, in order to precondition the soft tissues and minimize creep effects. After this, the crosshead continued to cycle between the same load limits at a speed of 50 mm/min while a force versus displacement graph was recorded.
The knees were tested in the ACL intact, ACL deficient and ACL reconstructed states at 20° and 90° flexion. In the reconstructed state testing was commenced in the crank up position (as tensioned initially) followed by testing in the crank down position (i.e. graft slackened) and finally in the crank up position (graft re-tensioned).
The graft tension was measured with no AP force imposed in the crank up position, in the crank down position, and again after return to the crank up position.
Changes in AP laxity were tested for statistical significance using a one-way Student's paired t-test, with p=0.05. The AP laxity of the reconstructed knees was compared to that of the intact or ACL-cut knees using a 2-way paired t-test, with p=0.017 for 95% alpha level applying a Bonnferroni correction.
The AP laxity results for the different stages of the procedure, are shown in
The tightening and slackening of the knee, as the crank rotated, led to significant (p≦0.0001) changes in graft tension (
The results were highly predictable. The adjustable ACL fixation device effected a graft shortening of 5 or 8 mm. With a graft orientation of about 60 degrees to the tibial plateau, the change in anterior displacement can be calculated applying 5 mm×cosine 60°=2.5 mm and 8 mm×cosine 60°=4 mm. As predicted the mean difference in laxity between up and down positions using an 8 mm crank, for both tightening and slackening procedures, was 4.0 mm at 20° knee flexion and 3.4 mm at 90° flexion.
The device allowed significant reduction in anterior laxity without undoing the tibial interference fixation. The alteration in anterior laxity was achieved simply by accessing the proximal end of the device and turning it by 180 degrees. Re-tensioning did not in any way require “intra-articular” access or direct interference with the graft itself.
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In operation the device of
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In use the graft support portion 620 can again be inserted through the loop at the end of the graft, and rotation of the pin will pull the graft upwards. However the pin can be rotated through more than 180° and in fact through any number of turns and the graft will be wound round the graft support portion 620 and the winding projection 621 to continuously increase the tension in the graft.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0801956.4 | Feb 2008 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/GB2009/000232 | 1/28/2009 | WO | 00 | 11/12/2010 |