| Literature DB >> 18558498 |
Guillem Gonzalez-Lomas1, Matthew A Kippe, Gabriel D Brown, Thomas R Gardner, Anthony Ding, William N Levine, Christopher S Ahmad.
Abstract
This biomechanical study compared 2 repair techniques for high-grade, partial, articular-sided supraspinatus tendon tears of the rotator cuff: transtendon in situ repair and tear completion with repair. Standardized, 50% partial, articular-sided supraspinatus lesions were created in 10 pairs of matched fresh, frozen cadaveric shoulders: 10 underwent partial lesion repair with an in situ transtendon technique using 2 suture anchors. In the contralateral 10 shoulders, the partial lesion was converted to a full-thickness tear and repaired with a double-row technique, using 4 suture anchors. Cyclic loading to failure of the supraspinatus tendon was performed using a material testing machine. Gap formation was measured for each rotational position and each incremental load. The in situ transtendon repair had statistically significant less gapping (P = .0001) and higher mean ultimate failure strength (P = .0011) than the double-row repair. In situ transtendon repair was biomechanically superior to tear completion for partial, articular-sided supraspinatus tears.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18558498 DOI: 10.1016/j.jse.2008.01.148
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Shoulder Elbow Surg ISSN: 1058-2746 Impact factor: 3.019