MCL Knee Injuries - Knee & Sports (2024)

Updated: Feb 26 2024

Ashley Bassett MD
Patrick C. McCulloch MD

MCL Knee Injuries

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  • summary

    • A medial collateral ligament (MCL) knee injury is a traumatic knee injury that typically occurs as a result of a sudden valgus force to the lateral aspect of the knee.

    • Diagnosis can be suspected with increased valgus laxity on physical exam but requires MRI for confirmation.

    • Treatment is generally nonoperative with bracing. Surgical management may be indicated for high grade injuries in the setting of persistent valgus instability.

  • Epidemiology

    • Incidence

      • most common ligamentous injury of the knee

        • 40% of knee ligament injuries

      • incidence is likely higher than reported

        • low grade injuries can be missed

    • Demographics

      • males > females

      • commonly occur in athletes

        • account of 8% of all athletic knee injuries

        • highest risk in skiing, rugby, football, soccer and ice hockey

  • Etiology

    • Pathophysiology

      • valgus stress is the most common mechanism of injury

        • usually with the knee held in slight flexion and external rotation

      • contact injury

        • more common than noncontact

        • direct blow to the lateral knee with valgus force

        • more often result in high grade / complete ligament disruption than noncontact injury

          • rupture usually occurs at the femoral insertion of the MCL

            • proximal MCL tears have greater healing rates

            • distal MCL tears have inferior healing and residual valgus laxity

      • noncontact injury

        • less common than contact but more common in skiing

        • pivoting or cutting activities with valgus and external rotation force

        • more often result in low grade / incomplete ligament injury

  • Anatomy

    • Ligaments of the knee

    • Anatomy

      • superficial MCL

        • located in layer II of the medial knee

          • with posteromedial corner ligaments and medial patellofemoral ligament

        • femoral attachment

          • medial epicondyle

          • 1cm anterior and distal to the adductor tubercle

        • tibial attachment

          • proximal tibia periosteum

          • 4.5cm distal to the joint line

          • deep and posterior to the pes anserinus

      • deep MCL

        • located in layer III of the medial knee

          • with the joint capsule

        • composed of meniscofemoral and meniscotibial ligaments

    • Vascular supply

      • superior medial and inferior medial geniculate arteries

    • Function

      • superficial MCL

        • primary stabilizer to valgus stress

          • at all angles of knee flexion

          • greatest stability contribution at 25 degrees knee flexion (78%)

        • secondary stabilizer to tibial external rotation and anterior/posterior tibial translation

      • deep MCL

        • secondary stabilizer to valgus stress

          • greatest stability contribution at full knee extension

      • other stabilizers of the medial knee

        • static stabilizers

          • posterior oblique ligament

            • resists tibial internal rotation at full knee extension

            • secondary restraint to valgus stress

          • oblique popliteal ligament

          • posterior capsule

        • dynamic stabilizers

          • semimembranosus complex

            • consists of 5 attachments

              • vastus medialis

              • medial retinaculum

              • pes anserine muscle group

                • sartorius

                • semitendinosus

                • gracilis

  • Classification

      • American Medical Association (AMA) Classification

      • Based onjoint laxityalone (described in 1966)

      • Valgus stress applied with the knee in 30 degrees of flexion

      • Graded by the amount of medial joint line opening

      • < 3 mm considered physiologic laxity

      • Caused confusion and difficulty comparing treatment results

      • Grade I

      • 3-5 mm

      • Grade II

      • 6-10 mm

      • Grade III

      • > 10 mm

      • Hughston Modification of the AMA Classification

      • Based on joint laxity and injury severity.

      • Severity graded by the extent of tenderness and quality of the endpoint with valgus stress at 30.

      • Degrees of knee flexion.

      • Often referred to as "degree" of injury.

      • Grade I

      • Mild

      • First-degree injury

      • Firm endpoint with no joint laxity

      • Stretch injury or few MCL fibers torn (no significant loss of ligament integrity)

      • Grade II

      • Moderate

      • Second-degree injury

      • Incomplete / partial MCL tear

      • Firm endpoint +/- mild increase in joint laxity

      • Some MCL fibers remain intact, generating the firm endpoint

      • Grade III

      • Severe

      • Third-degree injury

      • Complete MCL tear

      • No endpoint with valgus stress

      • Increased joint laxity (subdivided by degree of joint laxity)

      • Grade 1+: 3-5 mm

      • Grade 2+: 6-10 mm

      • Grade 3+: > 10 mm

  • Presentation

    • History

      • "pop" reported at time of injury

    • Symptoms

      • medial joint line pain

      • difficulty ambulating due to pain or instability

    • Physical exam

      • ROM and stability

        • valgus stress testing at 30° knee flexion

          • isolates the superficial MCL

          • medial gapping as compared to opposite knee indicates grade of injury

            • 1- 4 mm = grade I

            • 5-9 mm = grade II

            • > or equal to 10 mm = grade III

        • valgus stressing at 0° knee extension

          • medial laxity with valgus stress indicates posteromedial capsule or cruciate ligament injury

      • neurovascular exam

        • saphenous nerve exam

      • evaluate for additional injuries

        • ACL

        • PCL

        • patellar dislocation

        • medial meniscal tear

  • Imaging

    • Radiographs

      • recommended

        • AP and lateral

      • optional view

        • stress radiographs in skeletally immature patient

          • may indicate gapping through physeal fracture

      • findings

        • usually normal

        • calcification at the medial femoral insertion site (Pellegrini-Stieda Syndrome)

    • MRI

      • modality of choice for MCL injuries

      • identifies location and extent of injury

      • useful for evaluating other injuries

  • Treatment

    • Nonoperative

      • NSAIDs, rest, therapy

        • indications

          • grade I

        • therapy

          • quad sets, SLRs, and hip adduction above the knee to begin immediately

          • cycling and progressive resistance exercises as tolerated

        • return to play

          • grade I may return to play at 5-7 days

      • bracing, NSAIDs, rest, therapy

        • indications

          • grades II

          • grade III

            • if stable to valgus stress in full extension

            • no associated cruciate injury

        • technique

          • immobilizer for comfort

          • hinged knee brace for ambulation

        • return to play

          • grade II return to play at 2-4 weeks

          • grade III return to play at 4-8 weeks

        • outcomes

          • distal MCL injuries have less healing potential than proximal injuries

    • Operative

      • ligament repair vs. reconstruction

        • relative indications

          • acute repair in grade III injuries

            • in the setting of multi-ligament knee injury

            • displaced distal avulsions with "stener-type" lesion

            • entrapment of the torn end in the medial compartment

          • sub-acute repair in grade III injuries

            • continued instability despite nonoperative treatment

              • >10 mm medial sided opening in full extension

          • reconstruction

            • chronic injury

            • loss of adequate tissue for repair

        • technique

          • diagnostic arthroscopy recommended for all surgical candidates to rule out associated injuries

    • Prevention

      • knee bracing

        • functional bracing may reduce MCL injury in football players, particularly interior linemen

  • Techniques

    • MCL repair

      • approach

        • medial approach to the knee

      • indications

        • acute injuries

      • techniques

        • ligament avulsions

          • should be reattached with suture anchors in 30 degrees of flexion

        • interstitial disruption

          • anterior advancement of the MCL to femoral and tibial origins

        • internal brace

    • MCL reconstruction

      • approach

        • medial approach to the knee

      • indications

        • chronic instability

        • insufficient tissue for repair

      • graft type

        • can use semitendinosus autograft or hamstring, tibialis anterior or Achilles tendon allograft

  • Complications

    • Loss of motion

    • Neurological injury

      • saphenous nerve

    • Laxity

      • associated with distal MCL injuries

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