Publication

Joint awareness after ACL reconstruction: patient-reported outcomes measured with the Forgotten Joint Score-12

Journal Paper/Review - Oct 19, 2016

Units
PubMed
Doi

Citation
Behrend H, Zdravkovic V, Giesinger J, Giesinger K. Joint awareness after ACL reconstruction: patient-reported outcomes measured with the Forgotten Joint Score-12. Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc 2016; 25:1454-1460.
Type
Journal Paper/Review (English)
Journal
Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc 2016; 25
Publication Date
Oct 19, 2016
Issn Electronic
1433-7347
Pages
1454-1460
Brief description/objective

PURPOSE
To measure joint awareness in patients who have undergone anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction and to investigate medium- and long-term results of the procedure.

METHODS
All patients who had undergone ACL reconstruction with the same arthroscopic surgical technique at our institution between 2011 and 2014 (medium-term follow-up group (Group I)) or between 2000 and 2005 (long-term follow-up group (Group II)) were considered for inclusion in the study. A group of healthy controls were recruited to obtain reference values for the FJS-12 (Forgotten Joint Score-12). Propensity score matching was applied to improve comparability of patients and healthy controls in terms of sex and age.

RESULTS
Fifty-eight patients of the Group I (mean follow-up 31.5 (SD13.4) months, range 12-54), 57 patients of the Group II (mean follow-up 139 (SD15.2) months, range 120-179), and the healthy control samples (100 individuals) were analysed. Significantly lower FJS-12 was found in both groups (Group I: 71.6 and Group II: 70.1), compared to the two matched control groups (88.1 and 90.0).

CONCLUSIONS
The concept of joint awareness was successfully applied to evaluate medium- and long-term results of ACL reconstruction. The clinical relevance of this study is that it extends the construct of joint awareness as a patient-reported outcome parameter to ACL reconstruction surgery.

LEVEL OF EVIDENCE
Level III.