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Mechanical properties of all-suture anchors for rotator cuff repair.

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TLDR
It is demonstrated that decreased failure load, increased total displacement, and variable failure mechanisms in all-suture anchors, compared with traditional anchors designed for rotator cuff repair will aid the surgeon's choice of implant, in the context of the clinical scenario.
Abstract
Objectives All-suture anchors are increasingly used in rotator cuff repair procedures. Potential benefits include decreased bone damage. However, there is limited published evidence for the relative strength of fixation for all-suture anchors compared with traditional anchors. Materials and Methods A total of four commercially available all-suture anchors, the ‘Y-Knot’ (ConMed), Q-FIX (Smith & Nephew), ICONIX (Stryker) and JuggerKnot (Zimmer Biomet) and a traditional anchor control TWINFIX Ultra PK Suture Anchor (Smith & Nephew) were tested in cadaveric human humeral head rotator cuff repair models (n = 24). This construct underwent cyclic loading applied by a mechanical testing rig (Zwick/Roell). Ultimate load to failure, gap formation at 50, 100, 150 and 200 cycles, and failure mechanism were recorded. Significance was set at p Results Overall, mean maximum tensile strength values were significantly higher for the traditional anchor (181.0 N, standard error (se) 17.6) compared with the all-suture anchors (mean 133.1 N se 16.7) (p = 0.04). The JuggerKnot anchor had greatest displacement at 50, 100 and 150 cycles, and at failure, reaching statistical significance over the control at 100 and 150 cycles (22.6 mm se 2.5 versus 12.5 mm se 0.3; and 29.6 mm se 4.8 versus 17.0 mm se 0.7). Every all-suture anchor tested showed substantial (> 5 mm) displacement between 50 and 100 cycles (6.2 to 14.3). All-suture anchors predominantly failed due to anchor pull-out (95% versus 25% of traditional anchors), whereas a higher proportion of traditional anchors failed secondary to suture breakage. Conclusion We demonstrate decreased failure load, increased total displacement, and variable failure mechanisms in all-suture anchors, compared with traditional anchors designed for rotator cuff repair. These findings will aid the surgeon’s choice of implant, in the context of the clinical scenario. Cite this article: N. S. Nagra, N. Zargar, R. D. J. Smith, A. J. Carr. Mechanical properties of all-suture anchors for rotator cuff repair. Bone Joint Res 2017;6:82–89. DOI: 10.1302/2046-3758.62.BJR-2016-0225.R1

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Pullout Strength of All-Suture Anchors: Effect of the Insertion and Traction Angle-A Biomechanical Study.

TL;DR: The study provides biomechanical evidence that the optimal insertion angle for an ASA is more vertical than the 45°, and implanting the ASA vertically may be clinically more beneficial not only when performing knot tying during surgery, but also when the supraspinatus tendon loads the ASA postoperatively.
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The Clinical and Biomechanical Performance of All-Suture Anchors: A Systematic Review

TL;DR: Clinical findings of patients treated with ASAs for instability and rotator cuff repair showed satisfactory results and little increase in the complication rate, which may influence clinical success.
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Does having a rotator cuff repair prior to reverse total shoulder arthroplasty influence the outcome

TL;DR: Significant improvements in ASES scores were seen following RSA in patients who had previously undergone rotator cuff repair, but there was no significant difference in outcomes between the two groups, two years postoperatively.
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A hydroxamic acid–methacrylated collagen conjugate for the modulation of inflammation-related MMP upregulation

TL;DR: In this article, a hydroxamic acid (HA)-methacrylated collagen conjugate was used as the building block of a soluble factor-free MMP-modulating hydrogel network.
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What Makes Suture Anchor Use Safe in Hip Arthroscopy? A Systematic Review of Techniques and Safety Profile.

TL;DR: Suture anchors at anterior acetabular rim positions (3- to 4-o'clock position) should be inserted with caution, and small-diameter all-suture anchors had a lower in vivo incidence of articular perforation with similar stability and pullout strength to other anchor types in biomechanical studies.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Outcome and Repair Integrity of Completely Arthroscopically Repaired Large and Massive Rotator Cuff Tears

TL;DR: The minimum twelve-month evaluation showed excellent pain relief and improvement in the ability to perform activities of daily living despite the high rate of recurrent defects; however, at a minimum follow-up of two years, the results deteriorated with only twelve patients who had an American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons score of >/=80.
Journal ArticleDOI

Biomechanical Comparison of a Single-Row Versus Double-Row Suture Anchor Technique for Rotator Cuff Repair

TL;DR: Footprint reconstruction of the rotator cuff using a double-row Repair improved initial strength and stiffness and decreased gap formation and strain over the footprint when compared with a single-row repair.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cyclic loading of anchor-based rotator cuff repairs: Confirmation of the tension overload phenomenon and comparison of suture anchor fixation with transosseous fixation

TL;DR: Comparison of suture anchor fixation in this study with transosseous bone tunnel fixation in a previous cyclic loading study at this institution indicates that bone fixation by suture anchors is significantly less prone to failure than bone fixation through bone tunnels (P = .0008).
Journal ArticleDOI

Cyclic loading of transosseous rotator cuff repairs: tension overload as a possible cause of failure.

TL;DR: Clinical implications are that: 1) rotator cuff tears should be repaired without tension if possible; and 2) transosseous bone tunnels should ideally extend distal to the weak metaphysical bone so that purchase is obtained into cortical bone for greater fixation strength.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pull-out strength of suture anchors for rotator cuff and Bankart lesion repairs:

TL;DR: Both polyacetal suture anchors provide adequate immediate fixation for soft tissue repairs in the human shoulder, as indicated by immediate pull-out strength comparisons.
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