Knee Ligament Injury, Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
Conditions
Brief summary
Although current rehabilitation protocols following anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (ACLR) are based on the graft remodeling process, there is uncertainty about its time schedule. Moreover, there are individual differences in neuromotor learning and flexibility after ACLR. This study was conducted to investigate the effect of a criterion-based rehabilitation protocol on pain intensity, effusion, and knee function in amateur athletes following ACLR. Although current rehabilitation protocols following anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (ACLR) are based on the graft remodeling process, there is uncertainty about its time schedule. Moreover, there are individual differences in neuromotor learning and flexibility after ACLR. This study was conducted to investigate the effect of a criterion-based rehabilitation protocol on pain intensity, effusion, and knee function in amateur athletes following ACLR.
Interventions
Current conventional protocols were based mainly on biological tissue healing time frames. These protocols emphasize pain reduction, full passive knee extension, quadriceps strength training, immediate motion, immediate par¬tial weight bearing (only if there is a correct gait pattern without any complications), and functional exercises The criterion-based rehabilitation protocol is relatively new. It was developed and recommended in 2016 by the Royal Dutch Society for Physical Therapy (KNGF), aiming to assure a more patient-tailored rehabilitation and to maximize the speed of a patient's progress. It's a three phases protocol with a criterion-based progression.
Sponsors
Study design
Eligibility
Inclusion criteria
* Amateur male athletes who underwent ACLR surgery with an autologous hamstring (HS) graft. * Ranging in age from 18 to 35 years. * Underwent a pre-operative rehabilitation program with minimal knee effusion, full Extension, good patellofemoral mobility * Ability to actively control the quadriceps.
Exclusion criteria
* ACLR with any graft other than a hamstring graft * ACL revision surgery * associated medial or lateral ligamentous injuries * previous meniscectomy or meniscal repair * simultaneous meniscectomy or meniscus repair with the ACLR * cartilage damage.
Design outcomes
Primary
| Measure | Time frame | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Visual Analogue Scale | 6 months | It is a 100-mm horizontal line anchored by word descriptors at each end by no pain on the left and worst imaginable pain on the right |
Secondary
| Measure | Time frame | Description |
|---|---|---|
| limb symmetry index of hop test battery | 6 months | The mean score of the results of each item of hop test battery of the injured limb was divided by the corresponding mean score of the uninjured limb and the result was multiplied by 100. Hop test battery consists of the following: (1) vertical jump, (2) hop for distance, (3) drop jump followed by a double hop for distance, (4) square hop and (5) side hop. |
| Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score | 6 months | it is a 42-item self-questionnaire with five subscales. A five-point scale ranging from 0 (no problem) to 4 (extreme problems) was used to score each item and the scores of each subscale were individually transformed into a 0-100 scale (0 = extreme knee problems, 100 = no knee problem) |
| knee effusion grading scale | 6 months | Its a reliable and valid method which Based on a stroke test, where effusion of the knee joint is quantified using a 5-point scale. A 0 grade means no wave is produced with the downward stroke |
Countries
Egypt