Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Biomechanical evaluation of physeal-sparing fixation methods in tibial eminence fractures.
Anderson, Christian N; Nyman, Jeffry S; McCullough, Kirk A; Song, Yanna; Uppuganti, Sasidhar; O'Neill, Kevin R; Anderson, Allen F; Dunn, Warren R.
Affiliation
  • Anderson CN; Tennessee Orthopaedic Alliance/The Lipscomb Clinic, St Thomas Medical Plaza, Suite 1000, 4230 Harding Road, Nashville, TN 37205, USA. canders6@comcast.net
Am J Sports Med ; 41(7): 1586-94, 2013 Jul.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23690259
ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND:

Tibial eminence fractures occur most commonly in skeletally immature children. Several techniques using physeal-sparing fracture fixation have been described, but their structural properties have not been evaluated.

PURPOSE:

To determine the strength and resistance to displacement of physeal-sparing techniques used to fix tibial eminence fractures. STUDY

DESIGN:

Controlled laboratory study.

METHODS:

Skeletally immature porcine knees were randomized into 4 treatment groups (1) ultra-high molecular weight polyethylene suture-suture button (UHMWPE/SB), (2) suture anchor, (3) polydioxanone suture-suture button (PDS/SB), and (4) screw fixation. A prospective analysis of bone mineral density using dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry was performed on all specimens. Fracture fragments were created in a standardized manner and measured for size comparison. After fracture fixation, biomechanical testing was performed with cyclical and load-to-failure protocols by loading the tibia with an anterior shear force.

RESULTS:

In load-to-failure testing, screw fixation had a significantly lower median peak failure load (186.4 N; lower quartile [LQ], 158.4 N; upper quartile [UQ], 232.6 N) than did UHMWPE/SB (465.8 N; LQ, 397.8 N; UQ, 527.8 N), suture anchors (440.5 N; LQ, 323.0 N; UQ, 562.3 N), and PDS/SB (404.3 N; LQ, 385.9 N; UQ, 415.6 N). UHMWPE/SB demonstrated a significantly higher median yield load (465.8 N; LQ, 397.8 N; UQ, 527.8 N) than did PDS/SB (306.7 N; LQ, 271.4, N; UQ, 405.7 N) and screw fixation (179.0 N; LQ, 120.2 N; UQ, 232.5 N). During cyclical testing, screw fixation demonstrated significantly lower percentage survival of specimens (0%) compared with the other groups (UHMWPE/SB, 100%; suture anchor, 78%; PDS/SB, 78%). After 1000 cycles of loading, PDS/SB fixation had significantly more median creep (6.76 mm; LQ, 6.34 mm; UQ, 8.28 mm) than did UHMWPE/SB (4.43 mm; LQ, 3.80 mm; UQ, 4.73 mm) and suture anchor fixation (3.06 mm; LQ, 2.59 mm; UQ, 4.28 mm). The lowest median stiffness was observed in the PDS/SB group (48.6 N/mm; LQ, 45.3 N/mm; UQ, 54.2 N/mm). UHMWPE/SB fixation demonstrated a significantly higher median peak failure load after cyclic testing (469.0 N; LQ, 380.6 N; UQ, 507.2 N) than did PDS/SB (237.7 N; LQ, 197.3 N; UQ, 298.3 N) and screw fixation (132.4 N; LQ, 123.7 N; UQ, 180.9 N). Suture anchor fixation had significantly more variance, as demonstrated by width of interquartile range, in peak failure load, yield load, and creep than did other techniques.

CONCLUSION:

Physeal-sparing fixation of tibial eminence fractures with UHMWPE suture-suture button is biomechanically superior to both PDS suture-suture button and a single screw at the time of surgery and provides more consistent fixation than do suture anchors. CLINICAL RELEVANCE Suture anchors provide inconsistent fixation for tibial eminence fractures.
Subject(s)
Key words

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Tibial Fractures / Suture Techniques / Fracture Fixation, Internal / Knee Injuries Type of study: Guideline Limits: Animals Language: En Journal: Am J Sports Med Year: 2013 Document type: Article Affiliation country:

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Tibial Fractures / Suture Techniques / Fracture Fixation, Internal / Knee Injuries Type of study: Guideline Limits: Animals Language: En Journal: Am J Sports Med Year: 2013 Document type: Article Affiliation country:
...