| Literature DB >> 30289887 |
Susumu Yoneda1,2, Hirotaka Okubo2, Stephen W Linderman1, Nozomu Kusano3, Matthew J Silva1, Stavros Thomopoulos4,5, Fuminori Kanaya2, Richard H Gelberman1.
Abstract
The failure rate of intrasynovial tendon repair is high due to substantial elongation at the repair site and to the development of adhesions between the tendon's surface and the surrounding digital sheath. To minimize these complications, we sought to reduce the incidence of gapping and to facilitate the initiation of early motion by improving the time zero structural properties of repair. The Winters-Gelberman 8-strand repair technique was modified by adding surface lock loops and by using Fiberwire suture material. Forty-eight canine flexor digitorum profundus tendons were transected and repaired with one of three 8-strand techniques (Pennington modified Kessler, half hitch loops, or surface locking Kessler) using either 3-0 Supramid or 4-0 Fiberwire suture. Biomechanical testing was performed to determine the physiologic and failure mode properties of the repairs. The surface locking Kessler technique improved repair maximum load, load necessary to create a 2 mm repair site gap, and yield force compared to the modified Kessler and half hitch loop techniques. Fiberwire suture improved maximum load, the load necessary to create a 2 mm repair site gap, stiffness, and yield force compared to Supramid suture. Failure occurred by both suture pull out and by suture breakage in the modified Kessler, Supramid suture repair group. Failure occurred consistently by suture breakage in the surface locking Kessler, Supramid suture repair group. These results reveal that a novel locking Kessler repair is significantly stronger than the current state-of-the art flexor tendon suture repair technique. The use of a surface locking Kessler technique with Fiberwire suture markedly improves the mechanical properties of intrasynovial tendon repair by reducing the risk of post-operative gapping and rupture.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30289887 PMCID: PMC6173425 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0205121
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Flexor tendon suture configurations.
| Technique | Suture | Sample size |
|---|---|---|
| 3-0 Supramid | 8 | |
| 3-0 Supramid | 8 | |
| 3-0 Supramid | 8 | |
| 4-0 Fiberwire | 8 | |
| 4-0 Fiberwire | 8 | |
| 4-0 Fiberwire | 8 |
Fig 1Locking and suture configurations are shown.
(A1) Pennington modified Kessler (MK) locking loop. (A2) 8-strand with MK. Looped suture was used. This is a continuous piece of suture, where suture coloration is artificially added to aid in following the suture path. The first 4 strands are drawn in black and the others are drawn in blue. (B1) Single hitch loop (adapted from [6]). (B2) 8-strand using half hitch loop. See detail in [6]. (C1) Surface locking Kessler (SLK) loop. The two suture passes required to make a surface locking Kessler loop are shown sequentially as an end view from the transection interface, a side view, and a perspective view. The locking diameter is one eighth of tendon. Transverse suture is securely locked by the longitudinal suture. (C2) The first four passes were performed on the dorsal side. (C3) 8-strand using SLK.
Fig 2Failure mode.
For Supramid suture, failure mode was by pullout/suture breakage in the MK repair group and by suture breakage in the HHL and SLK repair groups. For Fiberwire suture, there was an increase in knot failures and a decrease in pullout failures when comparing the MK to the HHL and SLK repairs. The HHL and SLK repairs with 3–0 Supramid failed by the limits of the suture strength. For the SLK repairs with 4–0 Fiberwire, the loops failed primarily by knot failure. (MK: modified Kessler, HHL: half hitch loop, SLK: surface locking Kessler).
Fig 3Mechanical properties.
Maximum load, yield force, and 2 mm gap force were significantly increased for the SLK repairs compared to the MK repairs. All properties were higher for Fiberwire suture compared to Supramid suture. (MK: modified Kessler, HHL: half hitch loop, SLK: surface locking Kessler, * p < 0.05 **p<0.01 for priori comparison, mean ± standard deviations are shown).