The posteromedial corner of the knee: an international expert consensus statement on diagnosis, classification, treatment, and rehabilitation

Standard

The posteromedial corner of the knee: an international expert consensus statement on diagnosis, classification, treatment, and rehabilitation. / Chahla, Jorge; Kunze, Kyle N; LaPrade, Robert F; Getgood, Alan; Cohen, Moises; Gelber, Pablo; Barenius, Björn; Pujol, Nicolas; Leyes, Manual; Akoto, Ralph; Fritsch, Brett; Margheritini, Fabrizio; Rips, Leho; Kautzner, Jakub; Duthon, Victoria; Togninalli, Danilo; Giacamo, Zanon; Graveleau, Nicolas; Zaffagnini, Stefano; Engbretsen, Lars; Lind, Martin; Maestu, Rodrigo; Von Bormann, Richard; Brown, Charles; Villascusa, Silvio; Monllau, Juan Carlos; Ferrer, Gonzalo; Menetrey, Jacques; Hantes, Michael; Parker, David; Lording, Timothy; Samuelsson, Kristian; Weiler, Andreas; Uchida, Soshi; Frosch, Karl Heinz; Robinson, James.

in: KNEE SURG SPORT TR A, Jahrgang 29, Nr. 9, 09.2021, S. 2976-2986.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Chahla, J, Kunze, KN, LaPrade, RF, Getgood, A, Cohen, M, Gelber, P, Barenius, B, Pujol, N, Leyes, M, Akoto, R, Fritsch, B, Margheritini, F, Rips, L, Kautzner, J, Duthon, V, Togninalli, D, Giacamo, Z, Graveleau, N, Zaffagnini, S, Engbretsen, L, Lind, M, Maestu, R, Von Bormann, R, Brown, C, Villascusa, S, Monllau, JC, Ferrer, G, Menetrey, J, Hantes, M, Parker, D, Lording, T, Samuelsson, K, Weiler, A, Uchida, S, Frosch, KH & Robinson, J 2021, 'The posteromedial corner of the knee: an international expert consensus statement on diagnosis, classification, treatment, and rehabilitation', KNEE SURG SPORT TR A, Jg. 29, Nr. 9, S. 2976-2986. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00167-020-06336-3

APA

Chahla, J., Kunze, K. N., LaPrade, R. F., Getgood, A., Cohen, M., Gelber, P., Barenius, B., Pujol, N., Leyes, M., Akoto, R., Fritsch, B., Margheritini, F., Rips, L., Kautzner, J., Duthon, V., Togninalli, D., Giacamo, Z., Graveleau, N., Zaffagnini, S., ... Robinson, J. (2021). The posteromedial corner of the knee: an international expert consensus statement on diagnosis, classification, treatment, and rehabilitation. KNEE SURG SPORT TR A, 29(9), 2976-2986. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00167-020-06336-3

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{95ca02b295604406a97e9c000d3f62a5,
title = "The posteromedial corner of the knee: an international expert consensus statement on diagnosis, classification, treatment, and rehabilitation",
abstract = "PURPOSE: To establish recommendations for diagnosis, classification, treatment, and rehabilitation of posteromedial corner (PMC) knee injuries using a modified Delphi technique.METHODS: A list of statements concerning the diagnosis, classification, treatment and rehabilitation of PMC injuries was created by a working group of four individuals. Using a modified Delphi technique, a group of 35 surgeons with expertise in PMC injuries was surveyed, on three occasions, to establish consensus on the inclusion or exclusion of each statement. Experts were encouraged to propose further suggestions or modifications following each round. Pre-defined criteria were used to refine item lists after each survey. The final document included statements reaching consensus in round three.RESULTS: Thirty-five experts had a 100% response rate for all three rounds. A total of 53 items achieved over 75% consensus. The overall rate of consensus was 82.8%. Statements pertaining to PMC reconstruction and those regarding the treatment of combined cruciate and PMC injuries reached 100% consensus. Consensus was reached for 85.7% of the statements on anatomy of the PMC, 90% for those relating to diagnosis, 70% relating to classification, 64.3% relating to the treatment of isolated PMC injuries, and 83.3% relating to rehabilitation after PMC reconstruction.CONCLUSION: A modified Delphi technique was applied to generate an expert consensus statement concerning the diagnosis, classification, treatment, and rehabilitation practices for PMC injuries of the knee with high levels of expert agreement. Though the majority of statements pertaining to anatomy, diagnosis, and rehabilitation reached consensus, there remains inconsistency as to the optimal approach to treating isolated PMC injuries. Additionally, there is a need for improved PMC injury classification.LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Level V.",
author = "Jorge Chahla and Kunze, {Kyle N} and LaPrade, {Robert F} and Alan Getgood and Moises Cohen and Pablo Gelber and Bj{\"o}rn Barenius and Nicolas Pujol and Manual Leyes and Ralph Akoto and Brett Fritsch and Fabrizio Margheritini and Leho Rips and Jakub Kautzner and Victoria Duthon and Danilo Togninalli and Zanon Giacamo and Nicolas Graveleau and Stefano Zaffagnini and Lars Engbretsen and Martin Lind and Rodrigo Maestu and {Von Bormann}, Richard and Charles Brown and Silvio Villascusa and Monllau, {Juan Carlos} and Gonzalo Ferrer and Jacques Menetrey and Michael Hantes and David Parker and Timothy Lording and Kristian Samuelsson and Andreas Weiler and Soshi Uchida and Frosch, {Karl Heinz} and James Robinson",
year = "2021",
month = sep,
doi = "10.1007/s00167-020-06336-3",
language = "English",
volume = "29",
pages = "2976--2986",
journal = "KNEE SURG SPORT TR A",
issn = "0942-2056",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "9",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The posteromedial corner of the knee: an international expert consensus statement on diagnosis, classification, treatment, and rehabilitation

AU - Chahla, Jorge

AU - Kunze, Kyle N

AU - LaPrade, Robert F

AU - Getgood, Alan

AU - Cohen, Moises

AU - Gelber, Pablo

AU - Barenius, Björn

AU - Pujol, Nicolas

AU - Leyes, Manual

AU - Akoto, Ralph

AU - Fritsch, Brett

AU - Margheritini, Fabrizio

AU - Rips, Leho

AU - Kautzner, Jakub

AU - Duthon, Victoria

AU - Togninalli, Danilo

AU - Giacamo, Zanon

AU - Graveleau, Nicolas

AU - Zaffagnini, Stefano

AU - Engbretsen, Lars

AU - Lind, Martin

AU - Maestu, Rodrigo

AU - Von Bormann, Richard

AU - Brown, Charles

AU - Villascusa, Silvio

AU - Monllau, Juan Carlos

AU - Ferrer, Gonzalo

AU - Menetrey, Jacques

AU - Hantes, Michael

AU - Parker, David

AU - Lording, Timothy

AU - Samuelsson, Kristian

AU - Weiler, Andreas

AU - Uchida, Soshi

AU - Frosch, Karl Heinz

AU - Robinson, James

PY - 2021/9

Y1 - 2021/9

N2 - PURPOSE: To establish recommendations for diagnosis, classification, treatment, and rehabilitation of posteromedial corner (PMC) knee injuries using a modified Delphi technique.METHODS: A list of statements concerning the diagnosis, classification, treatment and rehabilitation of PMC injuries was created by a working group of four individuals. Using a modified Delphi technique, a group of 35 surgeons with expertise in PMC injuries was surveyed, on three occasions, to establish consensus on the inclusion or exclusion of each statement. Experts were encouraged to propose further suggestions or modifications following each round. Pre-defined criteria were used to refine item lists after each survey. The final document included statements reaching consensus in round three.RESULTS: Thirty-five experts had a 100% response rate for all three rounds. A total of 53 items achieved over 75% consensus. The overall rate of consensus was 82.8%. Statements pertaining to PMC reconstruction and those regarding the treatment of combined cruciate and PMC injuries reached 100% consensus. Consensus was reached for 85.7% of the statements on anatomy of the PMC, 90% for those relating to diagnosis, 70% relating to classification, 64.3% relating to the treatment of isolated PMC injuries, and 83.3% relating to rehabilitation after PMC reconstruction.CONCLUSION: A modified Delphi technique was applied to generate an expert consensus statement concerning the diagnosis, classification, treatment, and rehabilitation practices for PMC injuries of the knee with high levels of expert agreement. Though the majority of statements pertaining to anatomy, diagnosis, and rehabilitation reached consensus, there remains inconsistency as to the optimal approach to treating isolated PMC injuries. Additionally, there is a need for improved PMC injury classification.LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Level V.

AB - PURPOSE: To establish recommendations for diagnosis, classification, treatment, and rehabilitation of posteromedial corner (PMC) knee injuries using a modified Delphi technique.METHODS: A list of statements concerning the diagnosis, classification, treatment and rehabilitation of PMC injuries was created by a working group of four individuals. Using a modified Delphi technique, a group of 35 surgeons with expertise in PMC injuries was surveyed, on three occasions, to establish consensus on the inclusion or exclusion of each statement. Experts were encouraged to propose further suggestions or modifications following each round. Pre-defined criteria were used to refine item lists after each survey. The final document included statements reaching consensus in round three.RESULTS: Thirty-five experts had a 100% response rate for all three rounds. A total of 53 items achieved over 75% consensus. The overall rate of consensus was 82.8%. Statements pertaining to PMC reconstruction and those regarding the treatment of combined cruciate and PMC injuries reached 100% consensus. Consensus was reached for 85.7% of the statements on anatomy of the PMC, 90% for those relating to diagnosis, 70% relating to classification, 64.3% relating to the treatment of isolated PMC injuries, and 83.3% relating to rehabilitation after PMC reconstruction.CONCLUSION: A modified Delphi technique was applied to generate an expert consensus statement concerning the diagnosis, classification, treatment, and rehabilitation practices for PMC injuries of the knee with high levels of expert agreement. Though the majority of statements pertaining to anatomy, diagnosis, and rehabilitation reached consensus, there remains inconsistency as to the optimal approach to treating isolated PMC injuries. Additionally, there is a need for improved PMC injury classification.LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Level V.

U2 - 10.1007/s00167-020-06336-3

DO - 10.1007/s00167-020-06336-3

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 33104867

VL - 29

SP - 2976

EP - 2986

JO - KNEE SURG SPORT TR A

JF - KNEE SURG SPORT TR A

SN - 0942-2056

IS - 9

ER -