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Biomechanical analysis of arthroscopically assisted latissimus dorsi transfer fixation for irreparable posterosuperior rotator cuff tears—Knotless versus knotted anchors
Author(s) -
Ernstbrunner Lukas,
Borbas Paul,
Rohner Marco,
Brun Sascha,
Bachmann Elias,
Bouaicha Samy,
Wieser Karl
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of orthopaedic research®
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.041
H-Index - 155
eISSN - 1554-527X
pISSN - 0736-0266
DOI - 10.1002/jor.24963
Subject(s) - cadaveric spasm , rotator cuff , medicine , fixation (population genetics) , fibrous joint , orthodontics , surgery , population , environmental health
We compared the construct stability of traditional knotted techniques with modern knotless anchor systems used in arthroscopically assisted latissimus dorsi transfers (aLDTs) for irreparable posterosuperior rotator cuff tears. Eighteen cadaveric shoulders were age‐ and gender‐matched to the following three groups: knotted group (two knotted anchors); knotless group (two knotless anchors); and triple anchor group (two knotless anchors; one all‐suture anchor at the apex of the humeral head). All tendons were cyclically loaded in line of the aLDT over 400 cycles followed by a load to failure test. Outcome measures were the ultimate load to failure, elongation, construct stiffness, and failure modes. The triple anchor group revealed the highest ultimate load to failure (431 ± 78 N) compared with the knotted (326 ± 52 N; p  = .022) and knotless (353 ± 105 N; p  = .129) groups. Total elongation and construct stiffness were not significantly different comparing all three groups. The failure modes were: anchor pull‐out in all specimen of the knotted group; three (50%) anchor pull‐out and three suture pull‐out in the knotless group ( p  = .046); four (67%) anchor pull‐out, one (17%) suture pull‐out and one tendon pull‐out in the triple anchor group. Biomechanical analyses of knotless fixation techniques for aLDTs show similar construct stability and elongation compared with the traditional, knotted techniques. Bone fixation seems to be improved with the knotless anchor systems. In our practice, we continue to use the knotless fixation technique for aLDT and in the situation of weak, osteoporotic bone, we add a third (all‐suture) anchor to improve construct stability.

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