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Should you wait before having surgery for an ACL tear?

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June 10, 2017 at 10:15 a.m. EDT
A male therapist or doctor, starting to perfom the anterior drawer test. A test in 90° of knee flexion for the objectivation of stability of anterior cruciate ligament. In this position stability of the posterior capsle can hide a rupture of the ACL. (Jan-Otto)

For some people, delaying knee surgery after an ACL rupture and trying exercise therapy instead may produce better outcomes over the long term, researchers suggest.

Doing surgery on a torn anterior cruciate ligament soon after the injury may be linked to worse problems five years later, especially if an individual also has a lot of pain and swelling or has injured other parts of the knee at the same time, lead study author Stephanie Filbay of the University of Oxford said by email.

It can lead to a longer recovery and worse prognosis, she said.

Filbay and colleagues analyzed data from a trial comparing outcomes for 18-to-35-year-olds who, within a month of an acute ACL injury, were randomly assigned to surgery plus exercise or exercise therapy alone with the option to have surgery later.

Sixty-two participants had surgery plus exercise therapy and 59 had exercise therapy first. Half of the exercise-first group went on to have surgery: 23 of them about two years after the injury and seven in the three years after that, according to the report in the British Journal of Sports Medicine.

Exercise therapy alone led to fewer knee symptoms compared with early surgery plus exercise therapy, at least in the short term.

Those who had early ACL surgery and also had an injured meniscus (a cartilage pad in the knee joint) were less able to participate in sports post-surgery, and those who also had an injured ankle had a worse quality of life after surgery.

On the other hand, those who had exercise therapy alone and went on to have surgery on a different part of the knee had worse pain five years later than those who didn’t have non-ACL surgery.

Taken together, the authors say, the findings suggest that young, active individuals with an acute ACL injury who also have an injured meniscus, and those who have more-severe knee pain and functional problems early on may benefit most from starting with exercise therapy first, before considering ACL reconstruction.

However, decisions should be made on a case-by-case basis, they advise.

Michael Alaia, an orthopedic surgeon at NYU Langone Medical Center in New York, said this study was small, and “larger studies will be necessary to truly understand which patients may benefit from an extended trial of nonoperative management of their ACL tears.”

While the authors found that some active young people might benefit from an exercise-first approach, Alaia suggests the approach might benefit patients who are less physically active, have other medical conditions or don’t engage in sports requiring pivoting.

“Limiting the number of ‘giving way’ episodes could reduce the chance of further damage to other important structures inside the knee,” he said in an email.

Alaia noted that many of his patients who had no insurance coverage until after implementation of the Affordable Care Act had ACL tears years earlier — as active teenagers or young adults — but could not obtain treatment. “Unfortunately, a great number of these patients went on to develop significant cartilage or meniscus damage at an early age,” he said.

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