The effect of suture caliber and number of core suture strands on zone II flexor tendon repair: a study in human cadavers. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • PURPOSE: To compare the tensile properties of a 3-0, 4-strand flexor tendon repair with a 4-0, 4-strand repair and a 4-0, 8-strand repair. METHODS: Following evaluation of the intrinsic material properties of the 2 core suture calibers most commonly used in tendon repair (3-0 and 4-0), we tested the mechanical properties of 40 cadaver flexor digitorum profundus tendons after zone II repair with 1 of 3 techniques: a 3-0, 4-strand core repair, a 4-0, 8-strand repair, or a 4-0, 4-strand repair. We compared results across suture caliber for the 2 sutures and across tendon repair methods. RESULTS: Maximum load to failure of 3-0 polyfilament caprolactam suture was 49% greater than that of 4-0 polyfilament caprolactam suture. The cross-sectional area of 3-0 polyfilament caprolactam was 42% greater than that of 4-0 polyfilament caprolactam. The 4-0, 8-strand repair produced greater maximum load to failure when compared with the 2 4-strand techniques. Load at 2-mm gap, stiffness, and work to yield were significantly greater in the 4-0, 8-strand repair than in the 3-0, 4-strand repair. CONCLUSIONS: In an ex vivo model, an 8-strand repair using 4-0 suture was 43% stronger than a 4-strand repair using 3-0 suture, despite the finding that 3-0 polyfilament caprolactam was 49% stronger than 4-0 polyfilament caprolactam. These results suggest that, although larger-caliber suture has superior tensile properties, the number of core suture strands across a repair site has an important effect on time zero, ex vivo flexor tendon repair strength. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Surgeons should consider using techniques that prioritize multistrand core suture repair over an increase in suture caliber.

authors

  • Osei, Daniel
  • Stepan, Jeffrey G
  • Calfee, Ryan P
  • Thomopoulos, Stavros
  • Boyer, Martin I
  • Potter, Ryan
  • Gelberman, Richard H

publication date

  • December 15, 2013

Research

keywords

  • Caprolactam
  • Finger Injuries
  • Suture Techniques
  • Sutures
  • Tendon Injuries
  • Tensile Strength

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC3927965

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 84895071552

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1016/j.jhsa.2013.11.001

PubMed ID

  • 24342261

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 39

issue

  • 2