Abstract
Technique

Advantages | Disadvantages |
---|---|
Good bone to bone healing of the graft | Increased risk of patellar fracture |
Good functional outcomes and return to sports | Increased risk of anterior knee pain and kneeling pain |
Restores knee stability | Tendency toward increased risk of patellofemoral osteoarthritis |
Does not weaken the hamstrings in the athletic population | Graft harvest may be technically challenging |
Autograft readily available | |
Easy to obtain optimal size of graft |
Step | Pearls |
---|---|
Patient positioning | • The leg holder should be placed proximal enough to allow for femoral tunnel guide pin passage, exposure for an inside-out meniscal repair, or other concomitant open procedures. |
• The leg holder should also be tilted slightly to allow for full knee flexion while reaming the ACL femoral tunnel. | |
• It is important to remember to allow for the ability to flex and extend the knee at various stages of the surgical procedure, and therefore it should be checked before starting the procedure. | |
Graft harvest | • Incise from the distal third of the patella up extending 2 cm distal to the tubercle. |
• Carefully dissect the paratenon off both sides of the tendon. | |
• Mark a 1-cm-wide tendon graft and make the cuts longitudinally in line with the fibers between the patella and the tibia. | |
• A Bovie can be used to demarcate and expose the bony surface prior to the saw cut. | |
• Start the lateral bony cuts with a saw from distal to proximal in an oblique fashion. Repeat for the transverse cut. | |
• Use a straight osteotome just to release the bone plug. | |
• Both bone plugs should be prepared so that they easily pass through a 10-mm sizer. The femoral plug should be approximately 20 mm in length, while leaving the tibial plug longer at 25 mm. | |
Portal placement | • Portals should be placed along the medial and lateral aspects of the patellar tendon through the same incision. |
• An accessory medial portal should be created before creating the femoral tunnel. | |
Native ACL attachment identification | • The lateral intercondylar ridge, also known as resident's ridge, is more consistently identified arthroscopically, and this ridge represents the anterior margin of the AM and PL femoral bundles. A technical pearl for reconstituting native anatomy during reconstruction is to preserve some native ACL femoral footprint to help guide anatomic reconstruction. In general, the center of the ACL femoral attachment is 8.5 mm anterior to the posterior cartilage margin, 1.7 mm proximal to the bifurcate ridge, 14.7 mm proximal to the distal cartilage margin, and 6.1 mm posterior to the lateral intercondylar ridge. |
• For the tibial attachment, the anterior horn of the lateral meniscus is the most consistent landmark. Placement of the tibial tunnel should be in line (7.5 mm medial) to this landmark. | |
Femoral tunnel creation | • It has been reported that 90° of flexion is the optimal knee flexion to better identify the structures. |
• A burr is used to mark the desired location. | |
• When drilling, the knee should be flexed to 120° with a valgus stress to optimize the length of the tunnel and to avoid posterior wall blowout. | |
• After reaming 2 to 3 mm, check the presence and thickness of the posterior wall of the tunnel. | |
Tibial tunnel creation | • Remaining ACL fibers should be left intact to have a reliable landmark of the native ACL insertion site. |
• For cases in which the ACL tibial stump is not visible, placing a tibial single-bundle tunnel medial at the midpoint of the anterior horn of the lateral meniscus attachment may be a useful arthroscopic landmark for single-bundle ACL reconstructions. | |
• Careful attention must be paid to preserve the meniscal root insertions because iatrogenic anterior medial and lateral meniscus root and posterior lateral meniscus root avulsion can occur because of malposition of the tibial tunnel(s) during ACL reconstruction. | |
Fixation | • The ACL graft is passed through the tibia into the femoral ACL tunnel and then fixed in the femur with a 7- × 20-mm titanium interference screw. The screw should be positioned superiorly on the tunnel to position the graft inferiorly. |
• Cycle the knee several times while applying traction to remove any slack out of the graft and to ensure that no impingement is present. | |
• Distal traction is then applied to the ACL graft, and the tibial ACL graft fixation is performed with a 9- × 20-mm titanium interference screw with the knee in full extension. |
Patient Positioning and Anesthesia
Surgical Technique
Graft Harvest

Graft Preparation
Femoral Tunnel Preparation

Tibial Tunnel Preparation

Graft Passage and Fixation



Closure

Discussion
- Persson A.
- Fjeldsgaard K.
- Gjertsen J.E.
- et al.
- Rahr-Wagner L.
- Thillemann T.M.
- Pedersen A.B.
- Lind M.
Supplementary Data
- Video 1
The patient is placed in the supine position on the operating table. Patellar tendon (bone-tendon-bone) harvest: The skin is initially marked from the patella to the tibial tubercle at the midline of the knee for a length of approximately 9 cm. Sharp dissection is carried through skin and subcutaneous tissue to the paratenon layer using a scalpel. The paratenon layer is separated from the underlying tendon in a thick flap, which is repaired during closure. We use a surgical marker to delineate the middle one-third of the patellar tendon and mark a desired graft width of 10 mm in the center of the tendon. We then use a scalpel to mark longitudinal incision, in line with the tendon fibers, in the center of the patellar tendon to the 10 mm desired width. A Bovie electrocautery device is used to delineate the patellar and tibial bone plugs and clear soft tissue from the bone to facilitate the harvest. The patellar bone plug measures 10 mm wide by 20 mm long, and the tibial bone plug measures 10 mm wide by 25 mm long from the tendinous insertion of the patellar tendon to the respective bones. A sagittal saw is then used to harvest the plugs from the previously measured and established tracks created before. The saw blade is angled 30° toward the midline in the patella for the lateral and medial cuts and 45° distally for the proximal cut. The saw blade is angled 20° toward midline in the tibia for the lateral and medial cuts and 45° proximally for the distal cut. Thin ⅜- and ½-in. straight osteotomes are used to gently free the plug out from the patella. This process should be relatively easy if adequate saw cuts were previously made. Avoid excessive malleting and levering with the osteotomes to prevent cartilage damage and iatrogenic fracture. The final step of harvest consists of sharply dissecting remaining soft tissue attachments from the graft during removal with a scalpel. We typically fashion the femoral plug to be approximately 20 mm in length, while leaving the tibial plug longer at 25 mm and to easily pass through a 10-mm sizer. Standard anterolateral and anteromedial portals are created, and a diagnostic arthroscopy is performed. The femoral tunnel is created first. An arthroscope placed in the anterolateral portal is used to visualize the femoral footprint of the ACL. After soft tissue is cleared using an arthroscopic shaver and radiofrequency device, the LIR and the LBR can be identified. The LBR marks the separation between the anteromedial and posterolateral bundles of the ACL. The LIR, also known as resident's ridge, is more consistently identified arthroscopically, and this ridge represents the anterior margin of the anteromedial and posterolateral femoral bundles. An arthroscopic burr is used to perform a focal notchplasty to restore the anatomic shape of the intercondylar notch, which helps facilitate graft passage and prevents graft impingement, thereby ensuring knee range of motion after reconstruction. Then attention is turned to the tibial ACL attachment. An arthroscope placed in the anterolateral portal is used to visualize the tibial footprint of the ACL. The standard anteromedial portal is used as a working portal, and the tibial ACL guide set to 65° is placed through this portal to the anatomic center of the ACL. The anatomic footprint on the tibia is commonly identified arthroscopically as being approximately 9 mm posterior to the intermeniscal ligament, 7 mm anterior to the PCL, and should not exit the tibial plateau posterior to the anterior horn of the lateral meniscus. The guide should engage the tibia approximately halfway down the tibial tubercle bone plug harvest site roughly 1.5 to 2 cm medial to the tubercle. Graft passage after creation of the femoral and tibial tunnels is facilitated by previously placed “passing sutures” by retrieving the looped end through the distal tibial tunnel. The graft passage process is visualized arthroscopically through the anterolateral portal. The 4 suture ends on the patellar bone-plug end of the patellar tendon graft are placed through the loop and then pulled through the joint and out the lateral aspect of the femur and skin by assistance. The graft is pulled and positioned into the femoral tunnel under arthroscopic visualization with the aid of a 90° hemostat placed through the anteromedial portal, ensuring the graft does not twist during passage. The graft is pulled until the lateral wall of the tunnel is met with the bone plug. Femoral fixation of the ACL graft is performed with the knee in maximal flexion. Then a guide pin is inserted through the accessory medial portal with visualization from the anterolateral portal to the superior aspect of the graft and femoral tunnel junction. A 7- × 20-mm cannulated titanium interference screw is then placed under arthroscopic visualization; this is facilitated with a soft tissue, cannulated protector to prevent iatrogenic injury to the PCL. The screw is placed while an assistant is pulling lateral tension on the passed graft. Tibial fixation of the ACL graft is performed with the knee fully extended and the joint reduced. A guide pin is inserted to the superior-lateral aspect of the tunnel-graft interface. The assistant pulls the graft taut while a 9- × 20-mm cannulated titanium interference screw is used for tibial fixation. Excess bone that may be present outside of the tibial tunnel can be removed with an oscillating saw. Excess bone from the bone–patellar tendon–bone autograft that was saved during graft preparation is used as bone graft at the patellar and tibial harvest sites. A priority is placed on bone graft being used to fill the patellar bone void created during harvest. (ACL, anterior cruciate ligament; LBR, lateral bifurcate ridge; LIR, lateral intercondylar ridge; PCL, anterior cruciate ligament.)
References
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Footnotes
The authors report the following potential conflicts of interest or sources of funding: R.F.L. receives institutional support from Arthrex, Ossur, Siemens, and Smith & Nephew; consultancy fees from Arthrex, Smith & Nephew, and Ossur; grants from Health East, Norway, and the National Institutes of Health (R-13 grant for biologics); and has patents for Ossur and Smith & Nephew.
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