Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

ARTHRITIS INEVITABLE?

- By Gina Kolata

When Jason Lalli of Canonsburg tore his left anterior cruciate ligament at age 26, he thought he would be fine as soon as he had his knee repaired.

As a soccer player who competed through college and then on recreation­al teams, he knew that ACL injuries could be debilitati­ng, but also that orthopedis­ts could fix them.

He figured that he would miss a season, but that he could play and coach the game he loved for the rest of his life.

Four years later, his knee began to ache, and the pain became more constant over time, nagging almost “like a toothache,” he said. Within about another year, Mr. Lalli’s doctor did more work on the knee and gave him bad news: He had arthritis.

And, Mr. Lalli eventually learned, it almost was predictabl­e.

Orthopedis­ts have believed for years that torn tendons or ligaments put patients, no matter how young, at risk for arthritis. But quantifyin­g the long-term risk has been difficult because most orthopedic patients are not studied for extended periods after their injuries.

Mininder Kocher, an orthopedic­s professor at Harvard Medical School, has reviewed the available data and determined that the chance of getting arthritis within a decade of tearing a tendon or a ligament in the knee is greater than 50 percent.

Mr. Lalli, now 39, is hobbled by knee pain. He gave up soccer. Then he had to give up running. He has tried swimming and cycling, but he said, “My heart is not in it.” Some days he can barely walk.

And he has no memory of any doctor warning him that he could get arthritis.

“It’s like a dirty little secret,” said Dr. Kocher, who also is the associate director of the division of sports medicine at Boston Children’s Hospital. “It’s not that anyone is covering up. It’s just that it’s not well known.”

But as someone who spends his days repairing torn knee ligaments in teenagers, he is worried. He has written a paper, soon to be published, that says the number of ACL operations at 26 children’s hospitals in the United States has soared as more children and adolescent­s play sports that involve twisting the knee, like soccer and basketball, and often participat­e year-round.

In 2004, there were about 500 ACL operations at those hospitals. In 2014, there were more than 2,500, he said.

“This is a major issue for me,” said Dr. Kocher, who does more than 150 ACL reconstruc­tions a year, mostly in adolescent­s. “If a 15year-old gets arthritis in 10 years, knee replacemen­t is not a great option at age 25.”

One of the few long-term studies was carried out by Britt Elin Oiestad, a physical therapy researcher at Oslo and Akershus University

College of Applied Sciences, who followed 181 people for 10 to 15 years after ACL surgery. Seventy-four percent developed arthritis that could be seen on X-rays. Some of those patients had yet to feel arthritic pain; 41 percent of those studied had reported knee pain that indicated arthritis.

“It’s scary,” Mr. Oiestad said.

While knee injuries have received the most attention in research on arthritis risk, other joints are not immune, said Brett Owens, a professor of orthopedic surgery at Brown University Alpert Medical School. People who repeatedly sprain an ankle are at risk, he said. And up to 40 percent of those who dislocate a shoulder get arthritis withinabou­t 15 years, he said.

What researcher­s want to know is this: Why do these injuries precipitat­e arthritis?

Is the answer a bone bruise that injures cartilage? Chemical changes that happen as the body tries to repair the injury? An intrinsic instabilit­y of the knee?

And would surgical methods that more closely reproduce an individual’s original knee anatomy reduce the risk?

Research is not definitive, but seems to support all of the hypotheses, as well as a strong hunch among investigat­ors that there are genetic factors. Mr. Owens pointed out “ACL families,” explaining, “I have operated on multiple siblings in a family.”

Doctors say they struggle with telling adolescent­s who just tore an ACL that arthritis might follow. Mr. Owens said he mentions arthritis, but not in his initial conversati­ons with young injured athletes.

Although Mr. Lalli, the former soccer player, said his arthritis diagnosis was a shock, he also said knowing that it might happen would not have made much difference. He might have a genetic predisposi­tion toward knee arthritis. His father took up soccer in his late 40s and had to have surgery at 50 when he tore the ACL in hisleft knee.

Then he tore the meniscus — a piece of cartilage that acts as a cushion between the shinbone and the thighbone — in his right knee. He got arthritis later, but thought it was because of his age, not his injuries.

Mr. Lalli’s arthritis progressed despite his receiving a second ACL reconstruc­tion that was more tailored to the anatomy of his knee. His initial operation had been done by a surgeon who did not position the new ligament in the exact place it had been before.

Mr. Lalli had the subsequent operation done by Freddie Fu, the chairman of the Department of Orthopedic Surgery at University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine. Dr. Fu is a leader in ACL operations that are more anatomical­ly specific, and his procedure stabilized Mr. Lalli’s knee. Nonetheles­s, Mr. Lalli has faced years of disabling pain.

Four years ago, when his arthritis got so bad that he gave up playing soccer, Mr. Lalli asked for a knee replacemen­t. Dr. Fu refused, telling him that artificial knees last only 10 or 15 years in younger and active people and that each knee replacemen­t is more problemati­c than the one before.

A person can have only two or three knee replacemen­ts in a lifetime, Dr. Fu told Mr. Lalli, and so it was best to wait until he was 50.

While the ACL surgery has remained successful for 12 years, Mr. Lalli is now recuperati­ng from open knee surgeries needed in the past month. A few days after a relatively routine surgery to remove a bone spur in his knee on Oct. 10, he had an accidental collision with an active childand an infection set in.

He has been home from the hospital since Nov. 10.

“They said you’re pretty much never jogging again,” Mr. Lalli said. Cycling and swimming now are his options for exercise. He’s been told by January he will be back to full activity, with the help of physical therapy.

After all his surgeries, he said this is his first to have complicati­ons.

“Now it’s fully wrapped up, and I’m living in the bedroom.” When he’s up, he says, he puts on a brace, with an extra level of cushioning underneath.

He says he’s got to be very careful with his knee around his kids — one 5-year-old and 3-year-old twins, all boys.

Will he allow the boys to play soccer? Mr. Lalli, who loves the sport, is torn and has been talking it over with his wife.

“I’m not sure what we will do,” he said.

 ?? Courtesy of the Lalli family ?? Jason Lalli, 39, right, has experience­d a number of complicati­ons and surgeries since tearing his ACL at age 26. His family includes, from left, his wife, Dana, and children Max, Xavier and Alex.
Courtesy of the Lalli family Jason Lalli, 39, right, has experience­d a number of complicati­ons and surgeries since tearing his ACL at age 26. His family includes, from left, his wife, Dana, and children Max, Xavier and Alex.
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