Video Evidence of Tissue Sliding Improvement by Ultrasound-Guided Hydrorelease on Scars After Arthroscopic Knee Surgery: A Case Report

Postoperative scarring is a complication of arthroscopic knee surgery that causes a lack of terminal extension and tissue sliding defects. We present video evidence of tissue sliding before and after ultrasound-guided hydrorelease in a 53-year-old man. The patient presented with pain in the scarred area following arthroscopic knee surgery. His active and passive extension was -5° with restricted patellar mobility. Dynamic ultrasonography revealed scar tissue sliding defects. For ultrasound-guided hydrorelease, a needle (22G, 60 mm) was aimed at a site within 10 mm depth of the hypoechoic change in the scar area below the patella, and saline solution (10 mL) mixed with 1% lidocaine (10 mL) and 10 mg prednisolone was injected. Immediately after injection, the patient's extension was 0° with no pain or limitation of patellar mobility, and dynamic ultrasonography showed tissue sliding improved. Video evidence from dynamic ultrasonography clarifies the direction of the inadequate slide and the indication for and efficacy of ultrasound-guided hydrorelease. This case highlights the benefits of video evidence from dynamic ultrasonography before and after ultrasound-guided hydrorelease.

[1]  S. Miyazawa,et al.  A New Procedure for Ultrasound-Guided Hydrorelease for the Scarring After Arthroscopic Knee Surgery , 2020, Cureus.

[2]  S. Ohtori,et al.  Effect of Ultrasound‐Guided Hydrorelease of the Multifidus Muscle on Acute Low Back Pain , 2020, Journal of ultrasound in medicine : official journal of the American Institute of Ultrasound in Medicine.

[3]  T. Schlegel,et al.  Surgical Technique for Release of Anterior Interval Scarring of the Knee After Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction , 2018, Arthroscopy techniques.

[4]  Jacobo Alvira-Lechuz,et al.  Treatment of the scar after arthroscopic surgery on a knee. , 2017, Journal of bodywork and movement therapies.

[5]  N. Ozaki,et al.  Effects of interfascial injection of bicarbonated Ringer's solution, physiological saline and local anesthetic under ultrasonography for myofascial pain syndrome -Two prospective, randomized, double-blinded trials- , 2016 .

[6]  S. Donell,et al.  The surgical treatment of anterior knee pain due to infrapatellar fat pad pathology: A systematic review. , 2015, Orthopaedics & traumatology, surgery & research : OTSR.

[7]  Rui Yang,et al.  The FasT-Fix Repair Technique for Ramp Lesion of the Medial Meniscus , 2015, Knee surgery & related research.

[8]  J. Dragoo,et al.  Arthroscopic Release for Symptomatic Scarring of the Anterior Interval of the Knee , 2008, The American journal of sports medicine.

[9]  C S Ahmad,et al.  Effects of Patellar Tendon Adhesion to the Anterior Tibia on Knee Mechanics , 1998, The American journal of sports medicine.

[10]  B. Beynnon,et al.  Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (KOOS)--development of a self-administered outcome measure. , 1998, The Journal of orthopaedic and sports physical therapy.

[11]  T. Muneta,et al.  Quantitative Analysis of Synovial Fibrosis in the Infrapatellar Fat Pad Before and After Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction , 1997, The American journal of sports medicine.

[12]  F. Frost,et al.  A CONTROL, DOUBLE-BLIND COMPARISON OF MEPIVACAINE INJECTION VERSUS SALINE INJECTION FOR MYOFASCIAL PAIN , 1980, The Lancet.