The long-term rotatory stability of meniscus suture repair has not been firmly established clinically. Up to now there are only experimental studies done. This retrospective study aimed to compare the long-term rotatory stability of a knee with a meniscus suture repair with the stability of the uninjured knee in each of a cohort of patients. We evaluated both knees of 64 patients at an average follow-up of 11 years (range : 5 to 17) after successful arthroscopic meniscus suture repair. Each patient's injury was an isolated longitudinal-vertical meniscus tear and each patient's opposite knee was uninjured. All repairs were performed with the same outside in meniscus suture repair technique. Evaluation included standardised clinical examination, anterior stability testing with a ligament testing device, and rotational testing with a rotational laxiometer. In the stability assessments, the mean anteroposterior translation was the same for repaired and uninjured knees: 3 mm at 67 N and 5 mm at 89 N. The mean external rotation was the same in repaired knees and uninjured knees at 20 degrees of flexion (22 degrees) and similar in repaired knees (22 degrees) and uninjured knees (23 degrees) at 90 degrees flexion. The mean internal rotation was similar in repaired knees (12 degrees) and uninjured knees (13 degrees) at 20 degrees and 90 degrees of flexion. Our findings indicate that a knee with arthroscopic meniscus suture repair displays a rotational stability that is equal to or nearly equal to the stability of an uninjured knee. However, whether rotational stability will only be preserved due to meniscus repair and how much of the meniscus needs to be preserved in order to maintain the biomechanical stability of the knee remains unclear.
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J ISAKOS
December 2024
Twin Cities Orthopedics, Edina, Minnesota, USA. Electronic address:
Medial meniscus ramp tears are tears of the posteromedial capsule or peripheral rim of the posteromedial meniscus that frequently occur with anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) tears. The incidence and prevalence of medial meniscus ramp tears has been increasing in the recent literature due to the increased understanding of the anatomy and diagnosis of these tears. When a patient presents with an ACL tear, a medial meniscus ramp tear should be suspected if the patient has a grade 3+ Lachman or pivot shift exam, a vertical line of increased signal intensity in the posterior capsule or peripheral meniscus on magnetic resonance imagining (MRI), or posteromedial tibial plateau bone bruising on MRI.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: The objective was to use cyclic tensile loading to compare the gap formation at suture site of three different suture materials to repair bovine radial meniscal tears: (1) polyglactin sutures, (2) tough adhesive puncture sealing (TAPS) sutures and (3) ultra-high molecular weight polyethylene (UHMWPE) sutures.
Methods: Twelve ex vivo bovine knees were dissected to retrieve the menisci. Complete radial tears were performed on 24 menisci, which were then separated into three groups and repaired using either pristine 2-0 polyglactin sutures, TAPS sutures (2-0 polyglactin sutures coated with adhesive chitosan/alginate hydrogels) or 2-0 UHMWPE sutures with a single stitch.
Orthop Surg
December 2024
Department of Orthopaedics, The Second Xiangya Hospital of Central South University, Changsha, Hunan, China.
Arthrosc Tech
November 2024
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Osaka Metropolitan University Graduate School of Medicine, Osaka, Japan.
An incomplete discoid lateral meniscus is often associated with radial tears, which cause meniscal extrusion and result in poor healing outcomes. Centralization has recently been used as a surgical method to reduce extrusion. However, various repair techniques use single point of fixation sutures exclusively on the femoral side, potentially hindering healing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArthrosc Tech
November 2024
AKB Center for Arthroscopy, Sports Injuries and Regenerative Medicine. B&B Hospital, Gwarko, Lalitpur, Nepal.
All-inside techniques are based on devices that use PEEK (polyether ether ketone) or biocomposite anchors placed at extracapsular locations such as anchorage points over which the sutures are tied. However, because of complications like irritability and intra-articular migration of these hard anchors, suture-based all-inside meniscal repair systems are now gaining popularity. Although these devices have advantages over conventional all-inside devices, they are costly, thus limiting their widespread use.
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