| Literature DB >> 29554109 |
Stefan Plesser1, Mohammad Keilani2, Gyoergy Vekszler3, Timothy Hasenoehrl2, Stefano Palma2, Martin Reschl1, Richard Crevenna2, Stefan Hajdu1, Harald Kurt Widhalm1.
Abstract
Biomechanical studies have shown the use of suture anchors (SA) to be superior to the traditional transosseous sutures (TS) in the repair of quadriceps tendon rupture (QTR). This study aimed to analyze and compare the functional outcomes of patients treated for quadriceps tendon ruptures using suture anchors or transosseous sutures. Patients having undergone suture anchor repair or transosseous suture repair for quadriceps tendon rupture between 2010 and 2015 at one of the two participating hospitals were included. Patients from site A underwent TS repair (TS group) while patients from site B underwent SA repair (SA group). Exclusion criteria included previous or concomitant injuries of the involved knee, penetrating injuries and pre-existing neurological conditions. Clinical outcome was assessed by subjective scores (Lysholm and Tegner Scores, International Knee Documentation Committee (IKDC) Score, Visual Analog Scale (VAS) for pain), quadriceps isokinetic strength testing, Insall-Salvati Index (ISI), and physical examination. Non-parametrical statistical analysis was conducted using the Mann-Whitney U test. Twenty-seven patients were included in the study of which 17 patients (63%) were available for follow-up (SA group: 9, TS group: 8). All patients were male with a mean age of 62.7 (SD: 8.8) and 57.9 (SD: 12.7) years for the SA group and TS group, respectively. The groups did not differ in terms of demographic characteristics. No clinically significant differences were identified between the two groups. There were no re-ruptures in either group. Treatment of quadriceps tendon rupture using suture anchors provides a clinically valid alternative treatment to the gold-standard transosseous suture repair.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29554109 PMCID: PMC5858832 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0194376
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Transosseous sutures passed through patella.
Fig 2Placement of suture anchors.
SA group rehabilitation protocol.
| Surgery | 2 weeks | 4 weeks | 6 weeks | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ROM brace | Locked extension | 40° | 60° | Brace discontinued |
| Weight Bearing | Partial | Full as tolerated by patient | ||
| CPM | 40° | 60° | 90° | |
ROM: range-of-motion, CPM: continuous passive motion
Fig 3Recruitment protocol.
SA: suture anchor, TS: transosseous suture, QTR: quadriceps tendon rupture.
Patient characteristics.
| SA group | TS group | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Age (years) | 62.7 (SD: 8.8) | 57.9 (SD: 12.7) | |
| Gender | 9 men | 8 men | |
| BMI (kg/m2) | 29.1 (SD: 3.7) | 29.3 (SD: 4.0) | |
| Follow-up (months) | 46 (SD: 17) | 29 (SD: 7) | |
| Time-to-surgery (days) | 4 (range: 0–14) | 2 (range: 0–6) |
SA: suture anchor, TS: transosseous suture, BMI: body-mass index
Scores.
| SA group | TS group | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Lysholm Score | 88 (SD: 10) | 94 (SD: 7) | |
| Tegner Activity Score | 4 (range: 3–5) | 5 (range: 3–7) | |
| IKDC Score | 76.0 (SD: 13.9) | 85.1 (SD: 7.1) | |
| Visual Analog Scale | 5 (SD: 6) | 0 (SD: 0) |
SA: suture anchor, TS: transosseous suture, IKDC: International Knee Documentation Committee
Fig 4Distribution of Lysholm Score by group.
Isokinetic testing.
| SA group | TS group | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| PT/BW at 60°/s (NM/kg) | 122.5 (SD: 44.9) | 158.9 (SD: 41.9) | 0.200 |
| PT/BW at 240°/s (NM/kg) | 77.2 (SD: 31.1) | 104.7 (SD: 30.4) | 0.167 |
| Deficit at 60°/s (%) | 26.6 (SD: 27.8) | 0.7 (SD: 15.7) | 0.082 |
| Deficit at 240°/s (%) | 27.2 (SD: 23.5) | 0.3 (SD: 15.7) | 0.052 |
SA: suture anchor, TS: transosseous suture, PT/BW: peak torque per body weight, °/s degrees per second, NM/kg: newton-meters per kilogram