AI Article Synopsis

  • Study compared the biomechanical properties of the slip-knot suture technique with three other methods for repairing meniscal root tears in cadaveric menisci.
  • The cyclic loading tests showed that the slip-knot technique had lower displacement under load compared to other methods, particularly outperforming the modified Mason-Allen suture.
  • The slip-knot technique is presented as a simple and effective option for meniscal root fixation, demonstrating better stability against displacement than more complex sutures.

Article Abstract

Purpose: To compare the biomechanical properties of the slip-knot technique with three other transtibial pullout suture repair constructs for meniscal root tears.

Method: Thirty-two fresh-frozen cadaveric menisci were randomly allocated to four meniscus-suture fixation constructs: Two simple-sutures (TSS), two slip-knot (TSK) sutures, two cinch-loop (TCL) sutures, and two modified Mason-Allen (TMMA) sutures. Cyclic loading from 5 to 20 N was conducted for 1000 cycles at 0.5 Hz, and then loaded to failure at 0.5 mm/s. Parametric data (displacement during cyclic loading, ultimate load, yield load, and displacement at failure) were analysed using a one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA), whereas nonparametric data (stiffness) were analysed using the Kruskal-Wallis test.

Results: After 1000 cycles, the TCL construct significantly displaced the most (mean ± SD, 6.78 ± 1.32 mm;  < 0.001), followed by the TMMA (2.83 ± 0.90 mm), TSK (2.33 ± 0.57 mm), and TSS (2.03 ± 0.62 mm) groups. On ultimate failure load, there was no significant difference between the TSK group (123.48 ± 27.24 N,  > 0.05) and the other three groups (TSS, 94.65 ± 25.33 N; TMMA, 168.38 ± 23.24 N; TCL, 170.54 ± 57.32 N); however, it exhibited the least displacement (5.53 ± 1.25 mm) which was significantly shorter than those of the TCL (11.82 ± 4.25 mm,  < 0.001) and TMMA (9.53 ± 2.18 mm,  = 0.03) constructs. No significant difference in stiffness was observed among the four meniscus-suture constructs.

Conclusion: The slip-knot technique has proven to be a simple, yet robust and stable meniscal root fixation option; moreover, it exhibited superiority over the more complex modified Mason-Allen suture construct in resisting displacement at the ultimate failure load.

Level Of Evidence: Not applicable.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11420464PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jeo2.70020DOI Listing

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