Journal of Experimental Orthopaedics (Jan 2023)

Spontaneous healing of a ruptured anterior cruciate ligament: a case series and literature review

  • Leonardo Previ,
  • Edoardo Monaco,
  • Alessandro Carrozzo,
  • Gianluca Fedeli,
  • Alessandro Annibaldi,
  • Matteo Romano Cantagalli,
  • Giorgio Rossi,
  • Andrea Ferretti

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40634-022-00566-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 1
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Purpose The anterior cruciate ligament is probably one of the ligaments with the lowest healing potential. Many authors have reported cases of spontaneous healing but nowadays it is difficult to predict successful healing of an anterior cruciate ligament rupture and, even more, residual functionality and capability to return to sport. The aim of this study was to investigate cases of spontaneous healing in a population that received non‐surgical treatment after anterior cruciate ligament rupture and to perform an updated review of contemporary literature. Methods The authors retrospectively reviewed patients who suffered from an acute complete anterior cruciate ligament rupture and underwent non‐surgical treatment. No specific rehabilitation protocol was prescribed. A new magnetic resonance imaging study was conducted 6 months after the injury for all patients. A literature review was conducted regarding spontaneous healing of the anterior cruciate ligament. The papers included in the analysis were reports of any level of evidence, written in English, Italian, or French languages; articles were excluded if they reported non‐human studies, histological studies, studies conducted without magnetic resonance imaging or arthroscopic second look, or partial anterior cruciate ligament tear. Results Case series: Six patients were enrolled in the study. All patients had a proximal anterior cruciate ligament lesion. The minimum follow‐up was 13 months (range 6–20 months). At the last follow‐up the mean score on the Lysholm scale was 97, the mean IKDC score was 94, and the mean KOOS score was 96. All patients returned to their own sport activities; no one reported significant differences. The magnetic resonance imaging study at 6 months revealed an end‐to‐end continuous anterior cruciate ligament with homogeneous signal. No one had any new knee injury at last follow‐up. Literature review: A search of comprehensive databases retrieved 1057 articles; 8 full‐text articles met the eligibility criteria. The studies were heterogeneous regarding the populations analysed, sport activity level, treatment applied, healing definition, and follow‐up. The failure rate of non‐surgical management ranged among the papers from 0 to 73%. Conclusions The study findings show that spontaneous anterior cruciate ligament healing is possible and there are chances of clinical recovery for patients not suitable for surgery. However, there is still a lack of evidence about predictors, clinical outcomes, and adequate rehabilitation protocols.

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