Improved suture pullout through genipin-coated sutures in human biceps tendons with spatially confined changes in cell viability.

Clin Biomech (Bristol)

Department of Orthopedics, Balgrist University Hospital, Zurich, Switzerland; Department of Orthopedic and Trauma Surgery, Cantonal Hospital Lucerne, Lucerne, Switzerland. Electronic address:

Published: March 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explored how coating sutures with a cross-linking agent (genipin) can improve the strength of tendon repairs by examining human biceps long head tendons.
  • Results showed that genipin-coated sutures could withstand greater forces before failure, but also caused some cell death near the suture site (within 3 mm).
  • Overall, using genipin can enhance tendon repair strength but further research is needed to assess its effects in living organisms.

Article Abstract

Background: The suture-tendon interface often constitutes the point of failure in tendon suture repair. In the present study, we investigated the mechanical benefit of coating the suture with a cross-linking agent to strengthen the nearby tissue after suture placement in human tendons and we assessed the biological implications regarding tendon cell survival in-vitro.

Methods: Freshly harvested human biceps long head tendons were randomly allocated to control (n = 17) or intervention (n = 19) group. According to the assigned group, either an untreated or a genipin-coated suture was inserted into the tendon. 24 h after suturing, mechanical testing composed of cyclic and ramp-to-failure loading was performed. Additionally, 11 freshly harvested tendons were used for short-term in vitro cell viability assessment in response to genipin-loaded suture placement. These specimens were analyzed in a paired-sample setting as stained histological sections using combined fluorescent/light microscopy.

Findings: Tendons stitched with a genipin-coated suture sustained higher forces to failure. Cyclic and ultimate displacement of the tendon-suture construct remained unaltered by the local tissue crosslinking. Tissue crosslinking resulted in significant cytotoxicity in the direct vicinity of the suture (<3 mm). At larger distances from the suture, however, no difference in cell viability between the test and the control group was discernable.

Interpretation: The repair strength of a tendon-suture construct can be augmented by loading the suture with genipin. At this mechanically relevant dosage, crosslinking-induced cell death is confined to a radius of <3 mm from the suture in the short-term in-vitro setting. These promising results warrant further examination in-vivo.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.clinbiomech.2023.105907DOI Listing

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