Nutrient vessel dysfunction can contribute to mucoid degeneration of the posterior cruciate ligament coexisting with lipoma arborescens: A case study

Int J Surg Case Rep. 2024 Apr:117:109462. doi: 10.1016/j.ijscr.2024.109462. Epub 2024 Mar 5.

Abstract

Introduction: With the rapid improvement of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), mucoid degeneration (MD) of the anterior cruciate ligament (MD-ACL) has become an established disease entity and mechanical factors, such as increased posterior tibial tilt and intercondylar notch impingement, have been proposed. However, symptomatic MD of the posterior cruciate ligament (MD-PCL) remains an orphan disease without any established etiology.

Presentation of case: A man in his 60s exhibited restricted range of motion with knee pain. MRI revealed PCL enlargement with high-signal intensity and tram-track appearance on T2-weighted sagittal images and lipoma arborescens (LA) in the suprapatellar pouch. On gadolinium-enhanced MRI, the distal PCL was not contrasted. Arthroscopy revealed an almost normal expanded appearance with partial loss of the envelope synovium. Debulking operation was performed. Pathological findings revealed intravascular thrombus formation in early lesions of MD, and intraligamentous vascular degeneration and severity of MD were proportional.

Discussion: ACL is susceptible to mechanical external forces from surrounding tissues because of its anatomical features that induce protease expression, resulting in MD-ACL with denatured large aggregating proteoglycans deposition. Conversely, occlusion of nutrient vessels within the ligament was observed in this case of MD-PCL. Coexisting LA likely provoked an inflammatory response with hypercoagulability, resulting in thromboembolism of the envelope synovial nutrient vessel.

Conclusion: MD-CL is a disease entity comprising multiple pathologies. Although symptomatic MD-ACL is mainly caused by mechanical factors with a relatively high morbidity rate, nutrient vessel dysfunction can contribute to symptomatic MD-PCL with coexisting LA in middle-aged adults with an extremely low morbidity rate.

Keywords: Blood flow; Cruciate ligament; Lipoma arborescens; Lymphatic; Mucoid.

Publication types

  • Case Reports