• INTRODUCTION
    • Chronic anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) tear might be difficult to diagnose on MRI. Indirect signs might be a typical meniscal or cartilage lesion, or a spontaneous anterior drawer visualized by a decreased angle of the posterior cruciate ligament (PCL).
  • PRESENTATION OF CASE
    • A 27-year-old former ballet dancer was admitted to the emergency department for a locked left knee, without never having experienced previous symptoms of giving way or locking. The MRI performed revealed a medial meniscus bucket handle tear, without traumatic bone marrow oedema or ligament injury. The PCL angle was 130°. A former MRI of her left knee performed 1 year previously to investigate on the recurrent catching of her left knee showed a grade III medial meniscal tear of the posterior horn, and buckling of the PCL angle of 100°, as a sign of chronic ACL rupture. During arthroscopy and medial meniscal repair, the ACL showed complete loss of tension, and was therefore reconstructed simultaneously to enable proper meniscal healing.
  • DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION
    • Chronic ACL insuffiency is a major risk factor for subsequent medial meniscus tear, especially bucket handle tear. The locked knee might unable proper pre-operative clinical examination. The preoperative MRI therefore being the only possibility to diagnose concomitant ligamentous injury. This is the first case reported in literature showing, that a positive PCL angle sign might be falsely negative due to a locked medial meniscus bucket handle tear.