Preoperative muscle thickness influences muscle activation after arthroscopic knee surgery

Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2022 Jun;30(6):1880-1887. doi: 10.1007/s00167-021-06820-4. Epub 2021 Dec 18.

Abstract

Purpose: The aim of this study was to compare the correlation between preoperative quadriceps femoris muscle thickness and postoperative neuromuscular activation and quadriceps femoris strength in patients with and without patellofemoral pain after arthroscopic partial meniscectomy.

Methods: A series of 120 patients were prospectively analysed in a longitudinal cohort study of patients scheduled for arthroscopic partial meniscectomy. The patellofemoral pain group included patients who developed anterior knee pain after surgery while the control group included those who had not done so. Patients with preoperative patellofemoral pain, previous knee surgeries as well as those on whom additional surgical procedures had been performed were excluded. Of the 120 initially included in the study, 90 patients were analysed after the exclusions.

Results: There is a direct correlation between preoperative quadriceps femoris muscle thickness and the neuromuscular activity values and the strength of the muscle at 6 weeks after surgery. These results were seen exclusively in the group of patients who do not develop patellofemoral pain (0.543, p = 0.008). The group of patients who developed anterior knee pain in the postoperative period did not show this correlation (n.s.).

Conclusion: In patients without patellofemoral pain after meniscectomy, the greater the preoperative thickness of the quadriceps femoris, the more postoperative neuromuscular activation and strength they had. This correlation did not occur in those patients who develop patellofemoral pain after meniscal surgery.

Level of evidence: II.

Keywords: Knee arthroscopy; Patellofemoral pain; Quadriceps muscle activation; Quadriceps muscle atrophy; Quadriceps muscle strength.

MeSH terms

  • Arthroscopy / adverse effects
  • Arthroscopy / methods
  • Humans
  • Longitudinal Studies
  • Muscle Strength / physiology
  • Pain
  • Patellofemoral Pain Syndrome*
  • Quadriceps Muscle / physiology