Effect of Intraoperative Live Video Viewing on Kinesiophobia After ACL Reconstruction
Summary
NIH has registered clinical trial NCT07540715, a randomized controlled trial investigating whether intraoperative live arthroscopic video viewing improves postoperative psychological and functional outcomes in patients undergoing primary ACL reconstruction under spinal anesthesia. Participants are randomly assigned to either a video-viewing group or a control group receiving standard care without visual feedback. The primary objective is to determine whether this patient-specific visual biofeedback reduces postoperative kinesiophobia at 24 weeks.
What changed
NIH has posted clinical trial NCT07540715 to ClinicalTrials.gov, registering a randomized controlled trial examining the effect of intraoperative live arthroscopic video viewing on postoperative kinesiophobia in patients undergoing primary ACL reconstruction. Participants are randomly assigned to watch their surgery in real-time or receive standard care without visual feedback, with the primary endpoint measuring kinesiophobia at 24 weeks.
Healthcare providers and clinical investigators conducting orthopedic or sports medicine research should note this trial as informational. The registration does not create compliance obligations but reflects ongoing clinical research into patient psychological outcomes during surgical procedures.
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Apr 21, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
Effect of Intraoperative Live Video Viewing on Kinesiophobia After ACL Reconstruction
N/A NCT07540715 Kind: NA Apr 20, 2026
Abstract
The purpose of this randomized controlled trial is to investigate whether intraoperative live arthroscopic video viewing improves postoperative psychological and functional outcomes in patients undergoing primary anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction under spinal anesthesia Participants are randomly assigned to either a video-viewing group, where they watch their surgery in real-time, or a control group receiving standard care without visual feedback The primary objective is to determine whether this patient-specific visual biofeedback reduces postoperative kinesiophobia at 24 weeks.
Secondary objectives aim to evaluate the intervention's effects on state anxiety, illness perception, postoperative pain, and patient-reported functional recovery, including IKDC, Lysholm, and SF-36 scores
.
Conditions: Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries, Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction, Kinesiophobia, Anxiety
Interventions: Intraoperative Live Video Viewing, Standard ACL Reconstruction
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