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Treatment

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Spontaneous repair of the meniscus, unless the lesion is peripheral, is unlikely to occur. This is because the meniscus is avascular.

Treatment of meniscal tears depends on several factors e.g. - type, location, and size of the tear. Treatment options include:

  • conservative treatment without meniscal surgery
    • considered initially in all patients regardless of whether surgery is being considered
    • RICE (Rest with weight bearing as tolerated or with crutches, Ice, Compression bandaging, Elevation of the affected limb to minimise acute swelling and inflammation) regimen should be followed
    • activity modification, NSAID’s (if contraindicated or poorly tolerated consider paracetamol) and physiotherapy should be included in long term management (1)
  • complete meniscectomy
    • not a common procedure at present
    • has been shown to be associated with accelerated cartilage loss and development of osteoarthritis
  • partial meniscectomy
    • is indicated when meniscal repair is not possible (3)
    • only the unstable tissue is removed while preserving as much of the meniscus as possible (especially the outer third)
    • causes less damage to the joint when compared with complete menisectomy
    • is the preferred treatment method in patients with unstable tears (when primary meniscal repair is not possible) (2)
  • meniscal repair
    • aim is to maintain meniscal integrity and prevent long-term degenerative changes seen after meniscectomy
    • usually carried out in tears in the vascularised outer third of the meniscus (termed the ‘red-red zone’ signifying the area of vascularity) while repair of tears in red-white zone’ (watershed area between vascular and avascular meniscus) is controversial. ‘White-white zone’ (avascular zone) tears are repaired rarely
    • techniques include - open repair, arthroscopic inside out repair, arthroscopic outside in repair, arthroscopic all inside repair (3)
    • patients are kept on non or partially weight bearing for several weeks
    • healing takes around 4 months after which the patients are usually asymptomatic
    • a favourable repair outcome is seen in
      • surgery done within 8 weeks of injury
      • patient age under 30 years
      • tear length less than 2.5 cm
      • a peripheral tear
      • a lateral meniscus tear
      • concomitant ACL reconstruction
  • meniscal transplant
    • could be considered for selected patients who have undergone previous complete or near-complete menisectomy

In the case of bucket-handle tears, excision of the meniscus may be enough to reduce any risk of secondary osteoarthritis.

An important feature of treatment is postoperative physiotherapy.

Reference:


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The content herein is provided for informational purposes and does not replace the need to apply professional clinical judgement when diagnosing or treating any medical condition. A licensed medical practitioner should be consulted for diagnosis and treatment of any and all medical conditions.

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