| Literature DB >> 23618753 |
Jérémie Ménard1, Maxime Émard, Fanny Canet, Vladimir Brailovski, Yvan Petit, George Y Laflamme.
Abstract
Cerclage cables, frequently used in the management of fractures and osteotomies, are associated with a high failure rate and significant loosening during surgery. This study compared the capacity to maintain tension of different types of orthopaedic cable systems. Multifilament Cobalt-Chrome (CoCr) cables with four different crimp/clamp devices (DePuy, Stryker, Zimmer and Smith&Nephew) and one non-metallic Nylon (Ny) cable from Kinamed were instrumented with a load cell to measure tension during insertion. Significant tension loss was observed with crimping for all cables (P<0.05). Removing the tensioner led to an additional unexpected tension loss (CoCr-DePuy: 18%, CoCr-Stryker: 29%, CoCr-Smith&Nephew: 33%, Ny: 46%, and CoCr-Zimmer: 52%). The simple CoCr (DePuy) cable system outperformed the more sophisticated locking devices due to its significantly better ability to prevent tension loss.Entities:
Keywords: cable; cerclage; fractures; osteotomie; tension loss
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23618753 DOI: 10.1016/j.arth.2013.03.014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Arthroplasty ISSN: 0883-5403 Impact factor: 4.757