ACL rupture pediatric

 

ACLACLACL

 

Issues

 

1.  Increasing prevalence due to increased sports

 

2.  increased early reconstruction due to risk of chondral /meniscal damage from nonoperative care

 

3.  Risk of physeal arrest high with standard ACL reconstruction

 

Epidemiology

 

Most occur within 6-12 months of skeletal maturity

 

Clinical

 

Hemarthrosis

- 60% of children with a hemarthrosis have ACL tear

- 40% patellofemoral dislocation with osteochondral fracture

 

Hemarthrosis

 

Imaging

 

ACLACL ACL

ACL rupture in 10 year old girl

 

Growth plate

 

Distal femoral growth plate: 9 mm/year

Proximal tibial growth plate: 6 mm / year

 

Greulich-Pyle atlas using PA xray of the left hand

- estimate skeletal age

- peak growth boys skeletal age 14

- peak growth girls skeletal age 12

- 2 years of growth after distal phalanges have fused

 

Left handleft hand

12 year old versus 14 year old hand xray.  Distal phalanges have fused in 14 year old. 

 

Nonoperative management

 

Indication

 

Delay surgery until close to maturity / reduce risk growth plate injury

Risk ongoing instability and damage to cartilage and mensicus

 

Results

 

Liao et al Knee 2025

- systematic review of early versus delayed reconstruction in 2300 skeletally immature

- lower risk of meniscal and cartilage damage with early reconstruction

 

James et al AJSM 2021

- systematic review of early versus delayed reconstruction in 1200 skeletally immature

- delaying ACLR > 12 weeks increased risk of meniscal and cartilage damage

 

Operative management

 

Indications

 

Instability

Non compliance

Meniscal tears

 

Options

 

Intra-articular +/- lateral extra-articular tenodesis

- physeal sparing / all-epiphyseal

- partial transphyseal 

- transphyseal 

 

Extra-articular / over the top

 

Surgery based upon skeletal age

 

Physeal sparing Transphyseal
> 2 years of growth remaining < 2 years of growth remaining

Boy 13 and under

Boys 14 and older
Girl 12 and under Girls 13 and older

 

Risk of surgery

 

Growth disturbance - angular deformity / leg length discrepancy

 

Tahir et al Knee 2025

- systematic review of different ACL techniques

- physeal sparing: LLD 3%, angular deformity 2%, graft rupture 8%

- partial transphyseal: LLD 6%, angular deformity 3%, graft rupture 10%

- transphyseal:  LLD 1%, angular deformity 2%, graft rupture 6%

 

Longo et al Bone Joint J 2017

- systematic review of ACL reconstruction in skeletally immature

- overall rate of growth disturbance 2.6%

- no difference between trans-physeal and physeal sparing techniques

 

Graft rupture

 

Migliorini et al J Orthop Traumatol 2024

- systematic review of all-epiphyseal versus transphyseal in skeletally immature

- 1500 procedures, mean age 13 with mean 4 year follow up

- all-epiphyseal: retear 9%, return to sport 99%

- transphyseal: retear 10%, return to sport 93%

 

Lateral extra-articular tenodesis (LET)

 

Kotipalli et al AJSM 2026

- systematic review of LET with ACLR in skeletally immature

- 205 patients

- ALCR: graft rupture 13%

- ACLR + LET: graft rupture 1%

 

Physeal sparing / All-epiphyseal ACL reconstruction

 

Concept

 

Tibial and femoral tunnel in epiphysis / don't cross physis

 

ACLACL

 

Technique

 

ACLACL

12 year old male treated with all-epiphyseal using hamstring

 

Vumedi all-eiphyseal hamstring ACL using endobuttons video

 

Vumedi all-eiphyseal hamstring ACL using endobutton and screw video

 

All epiAll epi

 

Fluoroscopy required

 

Tibial tunnel

- tunnel anterior tibial epiphysis 

- graft secured with screw post / staple into tibial metaphysis

 

Femoral tunnel

- femoral tunnel horizontal and remains in femoral epiphysis

- use fluoroscopy guidance to spare the physis

- secured with endobutton / screw

 

ACLACL

11 year old female treated with all-epiphyseal using hamstring

 

all epiall epi

12 year old boy all-epiphyseal with Arthrex buttons

 

Results

 

Knorr et al OJSM 2025

- 74 patients all-epiphyseal ACLR using hamstring

- 92% good results

- 4% graft failure

 

Cruz et al J Pediatr Orthop 2017

- 103 patients all-epiphyseal ACLR using hamstring

- average age 12 with 2 year follow up

- retear rate 10%

- 1% minor leg length discrepancy

 

Transphyseal ACL reconstruction

 

ACLACL

 

Principles

 

Minimize growth plate damage

- tunnels < 7% of growth plate

- tunnel diameter 6 - 8 mm

- vertical tunnels

 

Prevent physeal bar

- soft tissue / hamstring in tunnel across growth plate

- no screws across growth plate / metaphyseal fixation

- no bone plugs / BPTB across growth plate 

 

Technique

 

ACLACL

14 year old male with transphyseal ACL with fixation distal and proximal to growth plates

 

Vumedi transphyseal ACL reconstruction with buttons video

 

Analogous to adult reconstruction with hamstring autograft

 

Femoral tunnel

- more vertical

- endobutton not on physis to avoid tethering

 

Tibial tunnel

- vertical

- ensure screw doesn't cross growth plate

- can use button on tibia

 

Results

 

Nikolaou et al KSSTA 2011

- 94 knees transphyseal 4 strand hamstring ACLR

- mean age 14 with 3 year follow up

- 4% retear

- return to sport 78%

 

Complications

 

transphysealAngular deformity

Valgus deformity after transphyseal ACL reconstruction in a 13 year old male

 

Partial transphyseal ACL reconstruction

 

Concept

 

Transphyseal tibial

Physeal sparing femur / over the top with ITB

 

ACLACL

 

Technique

 

Arthroscopy techniques partial transphyseal using ITB 

 

Extra-articular / Over the Top

 

Indications

- > 5 years to maturity

- avoid physeal injury

 

Technique

 

Vumedi Over the Top ITB ACL reconstruction video

 

Arthroscopy technique Over the Top ITB ACL reconstruction

 

Lateral incision

- harvest ITB left attached distally, tubularize

- ITB passed extra-articular around lateral femoral condyle into the knee

- ITB passed under intermeniscular ligament

- passed out anteromedial portal

- fixation distal to the tibial growth plate

 

Results

 

Kocher et al JBJS Am 2005

- 44 patients average age 10 Tanner 1/2

- 5% revision rate

- no angular or leg length deformity

 

Kocher et al JBJS Am 2018

- 240 knees ITB autograft mean age 11 Tanner 1/2

- 7% graft rupture

- no angular or leg length deformity