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Two years later, both groups reported about the same amount of improvement in ratings for things like pain, performance in sports and how much their knee interfered with their lives. And about 40 percent of each group had returned to their previous level of sports intensity, as measured by that activity's stress on the knee.
Among those treated with physical therapy first, those who eventually got the surgery turned out no better than those who didn't.
Levy urged "a little bit of caution" in interpreting the study.
For one thing, he said, the patients were followed for only two years, so "we really don't know long-term the benefits or consequences of each of the two strategies they tested."
Some 40 percent of the group that began with rehabilitation went on to have the surgery within the two years, and more will probably do so after that, he said.
What's more, the rehabilitation group showed more signs of trouble with the meniscus, a rubbery, cushioning disc in the knee, noted surgeon Dr. Kurt Spindler of Vanderbilt University. That could raise their risk of eventually getting osteoarthritis, he said.
Frobell said researchers will also study five-year outcomes, and look for early signs of arthritis with X-rays and other medical imaging.
The work was financed by government grants and private foundations.
___
Online:
New England Journal: http://content.nejm.org/
ACL injury: http://bit.ly/aNcw3C
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