Biomechanical Analysis of Suture Anchor vs Tenodesis Screw for FHL Transfer

Author:

Drakos Mark C.1,Gott Michael2,Karnovsky Sydney C.1,Murphy Conor I.3,DeSandis Bridget A.1,Chinitz Noah4,Grande Daniel5,Chahine Nadeen6

Affiliation:

1. Hospital for Special Surgery, New York, NY, USA

2. Westchester Health Orthopedics and Sports Medicine, White Plains, NY, USA

3. University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Pittsburgh, PA, USA

4. WestMed Medical Group, Purchase, NY, USA

5. Orthopaedic Research Laboratory, The Feinstein Institute for Medical Research, Manhasset, NY, USA

6. Bioengineering-Biomechanics Laboratory, The Feinstein Institute for Medical Research, Manhasset, NY, USA

Abstract

Background: Chronic Achilles injury is often treated with flexor hallucis longus (FHL) tendon transfer to the calcaneus using 1 or 2 incisions. A single incision avoids the risks of extended dissections yet yields smaller grafts, which may limit fixation options. We investigated the required length of FHL autograft and biomechanical profiles for suture anchor and biotenodesis screw fixation. Methods: Single-incision FHL transfer with suture anchor or biotenodesis screw fixation to the calcaneus was performed on 20 fresh cadaveric specimens. Specimens were cyclically loaded until maximal load to failure. Length of FHL tendon harvest, ultimate load, stiffness, and mode of failure were recorded. Results: Tendon harvest length needed for suture anchor fixation was 16.8 ± 2.1 mm vs 29.6 ± 2.4 mm for biotenodesis screw ( P = .002). Ultimate load to failure was not significantly different between groups. A significant inverse correlation existed between failure load and donor age when all specimens were pooled (ρ = −0.49, P < .05). Screws in younger specimens (fewer than 70) resulted in significantly greater failure loads ( P < .03). No difference in stiffness was found between groups. Modes of failure for screw fixation were either tunnel pullout (n = 6) or tendon rupture (n = 4). Anchor failure occurred mostly by suture breakage (n = 8). Conclusion: Adequate FHL tendon length could be harvested through a single posterior incision for fixation to the calcaneus with either fixation option, but suture anchor required significantly less graft length. Stiffness, fixation strength, and load to failure were comparable between groups. An inverse correlation existed between failure load and donor age. Younger specimens with screw fixation demonstrated significantly greater failure loads. Clinical Relevance: Adequate harvest length for FHL transfer could be achieved with a single posterior incision. There was no difference in strength of fixation between suture anchor and biotenodesis screw.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Orthopedics and Sports Medicine,Surgery

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