RT Journal Article T1 A Quantifiable Risk Factor for ACL Injury: Applied Mathematics to Model the Posterolateral Tibial Plateau Surface Geometry. A1 Tat, Jimmy A1 Crapser, Drew A1 Alaqeel, Motaz A1 Schupbach, Justin A1 Lee-Howes, Jacob A1 Tamimi, Iskandar A1 Burman, Mark A1 Martineau, Paul A K1 Anterior cruciate ligament K1 Injury mechanisms K1 Joint geometry K1 Knee AB The mechanism for traumatic ruptures of the native anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) is frequently a noncontact injury involving a valgus moment with internal rotation of the tibia. The abnormal rotation and translation of the lateral femoral condyle posteroinferiorly relative to the lateral tibial plateau is thought to be related to the geometry of the tibial plateau. The purpose of the study was to mathematically model the posterior tibial plateau geometry in patients with ACL injuries and compare it with that of matched controls. The hypothesis was that increased convexity and steepness of the posterior aspect of the lateral plateau would subject knees to higher forces, leading to a potentially higher risk of ACL injury. Cross-sectional study; Level of evidence, 3. We mathematically modeled the posterior curvature of the lateral tibial plateau in 64 patients with ACL injuries and 68 matched controls. Using sagittal magnetic resonance imaging scans of the knee, points on the articular cartilage of the posterolateral tibial plateau were selected and curve-fitted to a power function (y = a × xn ). For coefficient a and coefficient n, both variables modulated the shape of the curve, where a larger magnitude represented an increase in slope steepness. Groups were compared using a Mann-Whitney test and α There was a significant difference in surface geometry between the patients with ACL injuries and matched controls. The equation coefficients were significantly larger in the patients with ACL injuries: coefficient a (ACL injury, 0.9 vs control, 0.68; P Patients with ACL injuries had a significantly greater posterolateral plateau slope. The steeper drop off may play a role in higher anterior translation forces, coupled with internal rotation torques on the knee in noncontact injury, which could increase ACL strain and predispose to ACL injury. PB Sage Publications SN 2325-9671 YR 2020 FD 2020-11-05 LK http://hdl.handle.net/10668/17750 UL http://hdl.handle.net/10668/17750 LA en NO Tat J, Crapser D, Alaqeel M, Schupbach J, Lee-Howes J, Tamimi I, et al. A Quantifiable Risk Factor for ACL Injury: Applied Mathematics to Model the Posterolateral Tibial Plateau Surface Geometry. Orthop J Sports Med. 2021 Apr 16;9(4):2325967121998310 DS RISalud RD Apr 17, 2025