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Arthroscopic Treatment of Meniscal Lesions on Healthy Meniscus in Children and Adolescents

Arthroscopic Treatment of Meniscal Lesions on Healthy Meniscus in Children and Adolescents

Recruiting
1-17 years
All
Phase N/A

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Overview

Meniscal lesions are common in pediatrics and mainly affect adolescents. These lesions can jeopardize the functional prognosis of the knee in the short, medium or long term if they are not well managed.

More precisely, it is a question of determining whether arthroscopic repair of isolated meniscal lesions in children gives good results and what factors influence them, with the aim of improving the care of children suffering from meniscal lesions.

The treatment of meniscal lesions comes down to either conservative or restorative treatment or non-conservative treatment by meniscectomy. For most authors, the treatment of meniscal lesions must remain restorative through meniscal suture, leaving no room for meniscectomy. The open approach has given way to the arthroscopic approach which, according to the literature, is the gold standard. Meniscal lesions are varied and therefore there are numerous therapeutic procedures. Therapeutic indications are precise but the results of the treatments remain differently assessed depending on the studies; studies evaluating the results of treatment in the pediatric population are few in number.

Based on this observation, the present study aims to describe the results of repairs of meniscal lesions in pediatric traumatology.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Minor subject under 18 years old
  • Subject operated on at Strasbourg University Hospital for repair of lesions on healthy meniscus during the period from February 1, 2010 to September 30, 2022.
  • Absence of written opposition in the medical file of the subject (and/or their legal representative if applicable) to the reuse of their data for scientific research purposes.

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Presence of opposition from the subject (and/or their legal representative if applicable) to the reuse of their data for scientific research purposes.
  • Subject with lesion on discoid meniscus
  • Incomplete or unusable clinical file

Study details
    Knee Injuries

NCT06313424

University Hospital, Strasbourg, France

19 March 2024

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