| Literature DB >> 22318415 |
Abstract
PURPOSE: Recently, a new suture-button fixation device has emerged for the treatment of acute distal tibiofibular syndesmotic injuries and its use is rapidly increasing. The current systematic review was undertaken to compare the biomechanical properties, functional outcome, need for implant removal, and the complication rate of syndesmotic disruptions treated with a suture-button device with the current 'gold standard', i.e. the syndesmotic screw.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22318415 PMCID: PMC3353089 DOI: 10.1007/s00264-012-1500-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int Orthop ISSN: 0341-2695 Impact factor: 3.075
Biomechanical studies of suture-button repair of distal tibiofibular syndesmotic injuries
| Study | Intervention | Control | Main study conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Seitz et al. (1991) [ | 10 FFCA with No5 braided polyester suture and polyethylene buttons | 10 FFCA with single 3.5 mm tri-cortical screw | Pull-out strength SB lower, but more consistent. Less dependent on bone quality. Failure always through button |
| Thornes et al. (2003) [ | 8 ECA with No5 braided polyester suture and metallic endobuttons | 8 ECA with single 4.5 mm four-cortical screw | No significant difference between SB and screw fixation. SB more consistent performance |
| Forsythe et al. (2008) [ | 10 FFCA with TightRope | 10 FFCA with single 4.5 mm four-cortical screw | Significantly greater diastasis in the suture-button group at all external rotation loads. No hardware failures. Screw failed at lower load compared to the suture-button |
| Soin et al. (2009) [ | 10 FFCA with two TightRopes | 10 FFCA with single 3.5 mm four-cortical screw | No significant difference in translation and rotation between SB and screw. Screw had significantly greater failure torque versus SB. Two SB behave similarly to the syndesmotic screw in the syndesmotic rupture injury model |
| Klitzman et al. (2010) [ | 8 FFCA with TightRope | Same 8 FFCA with single 3.5 mm screw | Syndesmotic gap after testing not significantly different between intact and the SB group, screw group had significantly smaller gap |
| Teramoto et al. (2011) [ | 6 FFCA sequentially tested intact, syndesmotic injury, single TightRope, double TightRope, anatomical TightRope, and 3.5-mm screw model | Screw most rigid fixation, anatomical SB adequate fixation, single and double SB insufficient stabilization in multidirectional testing | |
FFCA fresh frozen cadaver ankles, ECA embalmed cadaver ankles, SB suture-button device
Study characteristics and key results
| Study | Patients ( | Control (n) | LOE | Follow-up (months) | Score (max) | Points (P vs C) | Implant removal | Complications | Implant failure |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Thornes et al. (2005) [ | 16 | 16 | 3 | 12 | AOFAS (100) | 93 vs 83 | 0 vs 12 | None | None |
| SB earlier return to work | |||||||||
| McMurray et al. (2007) [ | 16 | None | 4 | 5 | AOFAS | 87 | 2 | 1 | None |
| Cottom et al. (2008–2009) [ | 25 | 25 | 3 | 10 | modAOFAS (63) | 51 vs 54 | 0 vs 17 | N.A. | None |
| SF12 | 102 vs 102 | ||||||||
| Coetzee and Ebeling (2009) [ | 12 | 12 | 1 | 28 | AOFAS (100) | 94 vs 88 | 1 vs 1 | N.A. | None |
| Gadd et al. (2009) [ | 38 | None | 4 | 14–42 | N.A. | N.A. | 3 | 2 | None |
| Rajkumar et al. (2009) [ | 12 | 12 | 3 | 14 | OMAS (100) | 86 | N.A. | N.A. | N.A. |
| SB earlier mobilization and return to work | |||||||||
| Treon et al. (2009) [ | 18 | None | 4 | 4–41 | N.A. | N.A. | 4 | 6 | 2 |
| Willmoth et al. (2009) [ | 6 | None | 4 | 5 | N.A. | N.A. | 2 | None | None |
| DeGroot et al. (2011) [ | 24 | None | 4 | 20 | AOFAS (100) | 94 | 6 | None | None |
| Qamar et al. (2011) [ | 16 | None | 4 | 26 | AOFAS (100) | 86.9 | 1 | 2 | None |
| Naqvi et al. (2011) [ | 49 | None | 4 | 24 | AOFAS (100) | 85.6 | 3b | 2 | None |
| FADI (100) | 81.2 |
P patient (suture-button), C control (syndesmotic screw), SB suture-button device, AOFAS American Orthopaedic Foot Ankle Society, OMAS Olerud Molander Ankle Score, FADI Foot/Ankle Disability Index, N.A. not available
a Abstract at scientific meeting
b Removals prior to technical alteration
Outcome comparison
| Study (year) | Patients | Follow-up (months) | Implant removal | Score (max) | Points |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kennedy et al. (2000) [ | 26 | 35 | 26 | Baird-Jackson (100) | 62.8 |
| Thordarson et al. (2001) [ | 32 (17 abs) | 11 | 15 | N.A. | N.A. |
| Heim et al. (2002) [ | 17 | 12 | 17 | N.A. | 94% GE |
| Hovis et al. (2002) [ | 23 (abs) | 34 | 0 | OMAS (100) | 94 |
| Sinisaari et al. (2002) [ | 30 (18 abs) | 20 | 12 | OMAS (100) | 85.2 |
| Hoiness and Stromsoe (2004) [ | 64 | 12 | 32 | OMAS (100) | 88.9 |
| Sproule et al. (2004) [ | 14 | 25 | 13 | GFA (100) | 95.6 |
| Shoe comfort (100) | 81.7 | ||||
| Kaukonen et al. (2005) [ | 38 (20 abs) | 35 | 18 | N.A. | N.A. |
| Kukreti et al. (2005) [ | 36 | 35 | 33 | N.A. | 86%satisfied |
| Thornes et al. (2005) [ | 16 | 12 | 12 | AOFAS (100) | 83 |
| Weening and Bhandari (2005) [ | 51 | 18 | 30 | OMAS (100) | 74.1 |
| SMFA (0) | 11.4 | ||||
| Bell and Wong (2006) [ | 30 | 15 | 23 | Baird-Jackson (100) | 87.5 |
| Moore et al. (2006) [ | 120 | 5 | 7 | N.A. | N.A. |
| Rao et al. (2008) [ | 17 | 12 | 6 | OMAS (100) | 87.3 |
| Ahmad et al. (2009) [ | 70 (abs) | 33 | 2 | AOFAS (100) | 90 (82.8% GE) |
| Coetzee and Ebeling (2009) [ | 12 | 28 | 1 | AOFAS (100) | 88 |
| Cottom et al. (2009) [ | 25 | 10 | 17 | modAOFAS(63) | 54 |
| De Vil et al. (2009) [ | 28 (bolt) | 66 | 5 | AOFAS (100) | 86 |
| Hamid et al. (2009) [ | 52 | 30 | 27 | N.A. | N.A. |
| Rajkumar et al. (2009) [ | 12 | 14 | N.A. | OMAS (100) | 86 |
| Rao et al. (2009) [ | 21 | 12 | 15 | OMAS (100) | 81.1 |
| Egol et al. (2010) [ | 79 | 12 | 11 | AOFAS (100) | 83.5 |
| SMFA (0) | 14.5 | ||||
| Manjoo et al. (2010) [ | 76 | 23 | 12 | LEM (100) | 81.4 |
| OMAS (100) | 60.0 | ||||
| Miller et al. (2010) [ | 25 | 3 | 25 | OMAS (100) | 75.0 |
| Mohammed et al. (2010) [ | 12 | 13 | 12 | OMAS (100) | 75 |
| Wikerøy et al. (2010) [ | 48 | 101 | 33 | OMAS (100) | 82.5 |
| AOFAS (OTA) (100) | 86.5 | ||||
| Hsu et al. (2011) [ | 52 | 19 | 47 | Bray (100) | 82.7%satisfied |
abs bioabsorbable, GE good to excellent, OMAS Olerud-Molander, AOFS American Orthopaedic Foot Ankle Society Hindfoot score, N.A. not available, SMFA Short Musculoskeletal Function Assessment, GFA Global Foot Ankle Score