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Meniscal Ramp Lesion Repair Without the Need for a Posteromedial Portal

Abel Gómez Cáceres, Iskandar Tamimi, Francisco Javier Martínez Malo, Ignacio Vieitez Riestra, Raphael Pierre Idiart

2024Arthroscopy Techniques7 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Medial meniscal ramp injury has gained the attention of orthopaedic surgeons in recent years. It consists of a tear of the peripheral insertion of the posterior horn of the medial meniscus. Its prevalence in anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction varies between 9% and 40% according to different studies. Ramp lesions cannot always be diagnosed using magnetic resonance imaging scans. To identify ramp lesions, the arthroscope should be introduced into the posteromedial compartment of the knee during the routine examination of the knee (Gillquist maneuver). Not all authors advocate systematically repairing ramp injuries of the medial meniscus, especially when these injuries are small and stable. They have historically been repaired using an outside-in technique using a hook-type suture passed through a posteromedial portal. In this study, we present our all-inside suture technique without the use of a posteromedial portal.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineMedial meniscusMagnetic resonance imagingSurgeryFibrous jointLesionMeniscusLateral meniscusAnterior cruciate ligamentRadiologyOsteoarthritisIncidence (geometry)OpticsPathologyPhysicsAlternative medicineKnee injuries and reconstruction techniquesTotal Knee Arthroplasty OutcomesSports injuries and prevention
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