Oslo Sports Trauma Research Center

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Information about project titled 'Quantitative and qualitative assessment of the posterior medial meniscus anatomy: defining meniscal ramp lesions'

Quantitative and qualitative assessment of the posterior medial meniscus anatomy: defining meniscal ramp lesions

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Project status: Published
Project manager: Nicholas DePhillipo
Supervisor(s): Lars Engebretsen, Robert LaPrade
Coworker(s): Gilbert Moatshe

Description

Background: Meniscal ramp lesions have been defined as both a tear of the peripheral attachment of the posterior horn of the medial meniscus (PHMM) at the meniscocapsular junction or an injury to the meniscotibial attachment. Precise anatomical descriptions of these structures are limited in the current literature.

Aim: To quantitatively and qualitatively describe the PHMM and posteromedial capsule anatomy pertaining to the location of a meniscal ramp lesion with reference to surgically relevant landmarks. 

Methods: Fourteen male, non-paired, fresh-frozen cadavers were used. The locations of the posteromedial meniscocapsular and meniscotibial attachments were identified. Measurements to surgically relevant landmarks were performed using a coordinate measuring system. To further analyze the posteromedial meniscocapsular and meniscotibial attachments, hematoxylin and eosin and Alcian blue staining were conducted on a separate sample of 10 non-paired specimens.

Results: The posterior meniscocapsular attachment had an average length of 20.2 ±6.0 mm and attached posteroinferiorly to the PHMM at an average depth of 36.4% of the total posterior meniscus height. The posterior meniscotibial ligament attached on the PHMM 16.5 mm posterior and 7.7 mm medial to the center of the posterior medial meniscus root attachment. The meniscotibial ligament tibial attachment was 5.9 ±1.3 mm inferior to the articular cartilage margin of the posterior medial tibial plateau. The posterior meniscocapsular attachment converged with the meniscotibial ligament at the most posterior point of the meniscocapsular junction in all specimens. Histological staining of the meniscocapsular and meniscotibial ligament PHMM attachments showed very similar structure, cell density, and fiber directionality with no qualitative difference in the makeup of their collagen matrices across all specimens.

Conclusion: The anatomy of the area where a medial meniscal ramp tear occurs revealed that the two posterior meniscal attachments merged at a common attachment on the PHMM. Histological analysis validated a shared attachment point of the meniscocapsular and meniscotibial attachments of the PHMM.