Anatomic Acromioclavicular Joint Reconstruction with and without Acromioclavicular Ligament Reconstruction: A Comparative Biomechanical Study

Author:

Johnson Steven M123,Esquivel Amanda O14,Lovse Lisa12,Cracchiolo Allison M1,Bishai Shariff K5,Chen Chaoyang1ORCID,Lemos Stephen E12

Affiliation:

1. Detroit Medical Center Sports Medicine, Detroit, Michigan, United States

2. Detroit Medical Center Sports Medicine Othropaedic Surgery Fellowship Program, Detroit, Michigan, United States

3. Christus Trinity Clinic, Palestine, TX, United States

4. Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Michigan-Dearborn, Detroit, MI, United States

5. Michigan State University College of Osteopathic Medicine, East Lansing, MI, United States

Abstract

Background The purpose of this study was to determine if adding a reconstructed superior acromioclavicular (AC) joint ligament adds significant biomechanical stability to the AC joint over anatomic coracoclavicular (CC) ligament reconstruction alone. Methods Fourteen cadaver shoulders were used for the comparison of biomechanical stability among the anatomic CC ligament reconstruction alone, CC and AC ligament reconstruction, and the intact groups by measuring the displacement under cyclic loads. A load to failure test was then performed in the vertical direction at a loading rate of 2 mm /sec to determine surgical-repair joints’ tolerance to the maximum failure load. Results The average peak-to-peak displacement induced by cyclic load in the sagittal axis and vertical axis direction was not significantly different between CC ligament reconstruction, CC and AC ligament reconstruction, and intact groups. The maximum failure load for the CC reconstruction (224.9 ± 91.8 N (Mean ± SEM)) was lower than CC/AC reconstruction groups (326.2 ± 123.3 N). The CC/AC reconstruction group failed at a significantly higher load (t test, p = 0.016) than the CC reconstruction group. Conclusion CC/AC reconstruction surgical technique yielded a better shoulder stability than CC ligament alone reconstruction that may better maintain reduction of the AC joint. Level of Evidence: Level II.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Rehabilitation,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine,Surgery

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