Litcius/Paper detail

Tale of quadriceps and hamstring muscle strength after ACL reconstruction: a systematic review with longitudinal and multivariate meta-analysis

M. Girdwood, Adam G Culvenor, Ebonie Rio, Brooke Patterson, M. Haberfield, J. Couch, Benjamin F. Mentiplay, Michael Hedger, Kay M. Crossley

2024British Journal of Sports Medicine35 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to investigate how knee extensor and flexor strength change over time after anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (ACLR). DESIGN: Systematic review with longitudinal meta-analysis. DATA SOURCES: Medline, Embase, CINAHL, Scopus, Cochrane CENTRAL and SPORTDiscus to 28 February 2023. ELIGIBILITY CRITERIA: Studies of primary ACLR (n≥50), with mean participant age 18-40 years, reporting a quantitative measure of knee extensor or flexor strength were eligible. Muscle strength had to be reported for the ACL limb and compared with: (1) the contralateral limb (within-person); and/or (2) an uninjured control limb (between-person). RESULTS: We included 232 studies of 34 220 participants. Knee extensor and flexor strength showed sharp initial improvement postoperatively before tailing off at approximately 12-18 months post surgery with minimal change thereafter. Knee extensor strength was reduced by more than 10% compared with the contralateral limb and approximately 20% compared with uninjured controls at 1 year for slow concentric, fast concentric and isometric contractions. Knee flexor strength showed smaller deficits but was still 5%-7% lower than the contralateral limb at 1 year for slow concentric, fast concentric and isometric contractions. Between-person comparisons showed larger deficits than within-person comparisons. CONCLUSION: Knee extensor muscle strength is meaningfully reduced (>10%) at 1 year, with limited improvement after this time up to and beyond 5 years post surgery. Many people likely experience persistent and potentially long-term strength deficits after ACLR. Comparison within person (to the contralateral limb) likely underestimates strength deficits in contrast to uninjured controls.

Topics & Concepts

HamstringMedicineAnterior cruciate ligamentAnterior cruciate ligament reconstructionMeta-analysisPhysical medicine and rehabilitationMuscle strengthHamstring musclesOrthodonticsAnatomyInternal medicineKnee injuries and reconstruction techniquesTotal Knee Arthroplasty OutcomesLower Extremity Biomechanics and Pathologies