
Paul TrikhaIn the UK, I think the number of double bundle procedures being performed is going down. In 2010, I was at a major knee meeting in Warwick and it seemed then that all the talk was about double bundle! This year (2012) they did a quick hands-up survey - accepting that a few of the leading knee surgeons in the country weren’t there - but most were - when asked how many surgeons were routinely doing double bundle
ACL reconstructions not one hand went up.
I think surgeons are gradually coming round to the important concept of anatomic single bundle reconstruction with the
graft placed in a mid-bundle position on the
femur through an independent
femoral tunnel drilled through an appropriate
medial portal. This allows both the
femoral and tibial tunnels to be placed accurately and independently. This technique is straightforward, predictable and reproducible although it presents technical challenges for the traditional transtibial technique advocates.
The other important recent concept is of 'filling the footprint' of the native ACL on the femoral and tibial sides using hamstrings which can be made into thicker graft constructs (4-8 strands), for example a 4 strand consisting a of a quadruple semitendinosus and leaving the gracilis in situ (i.e only harvesting one tendon) or a 6 strand construct consisting a quadruple semiteninosus and a double gracilis. These thicker grafts fill more of the ACL footprint and may provide a more rotationally stable construct. There is less need for a double bundle reconstruction with its technical issues, in particular tensioning of the posterolateral bundle, especially as the clinical differences in outcome are not proven.
However I must admit the ‘double bundle’ concept has definitely improved our single bundle techniques as more consideration is given to anatomy and rotational stability.
Even recently - at a cadaveric knee meeting this month (March 2012) in Munich – there was essentially no mention of double-bundle surgery at all. It was amazing that the audience (like in this paper in the esska journal) were still comparing anatomic single bundle with traditional UK single bundle transtibial techniques, where the procedure was dictated by the instrumentation and the femoral tunnel depended completely on the tibial tunnel. In Australia and in particular Sydney where I did my fellowship training, the leading knee surgeons seem to have always perfomed a more anatomic ACL reconstruction and independent femoral tunnel drilling has always been routine.
I think most of the high volume knee ligament surgeons in the UK now will be using anatomic single bundle ACL reconstruction with independent femoral and tibial tunnel drilling, that is getting them both correct and then tensioning and fixing the ACL with a proven fixation device. We now - through education and workshops - need to convert our colleagues.