Biomechanical effects of medial meniscus ramp lesions on tibial cartilage, extrusion, and mobility using 7T Magnetic Resonance Imaging and Digital Volume Correlation
Biomechanical effects of medial meniscus ramp lesions on tibial cartilage, extrusion, and mobility using 7T Magnetic Resonance Imaging and Digital Volume Correlation
The study investigates subtype 4 medial meniscus ramp lesions, a common occurrence in ACL-deficient knees, but one that lacks thorough biomechanical understanding (Ollivier et al., 2022) for adjacent structures under physiological loadings. Ramp lesions, often seen in ACL reconstruction cases, involve the posterior horn of the medial meniscus and its attachments, notably the meniscocapsular junction and meniscotibial ligament (Ahn et al., 2011; Dephilippo et al.2018). While some suggest that these lesions might heal well, their impact on cartilage biomechanics remains uncertain, with limited literature addressing joint kinematics and loading in the medial compartment. Consequently, this study aims to bridge this gap by measuring medial tibial strain variations coupling 7T-Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) and the DVC method in three conditions.