Abstract
Secure tendon-to-bone fixation is essential for successful rotator cuff repair. Thus, the biomechanical properties of devices used in rotator cuff repair should be better understood. This controlled laboratory study was performed to evaluate response to incremental cyclic loading of six different anchor-wire complexes commonly used in rotator cuff repair.
Two absorbable anchors 5 and 6.5 mm in diameter and one metallic anchor, coupled with both ethibond or fibrewire (FW) were tested on five pairs of fresh-frozen human cadaveric shoulders. An incremental cyclic load was applied until failure using a Zwich-Roell Z010 electromechanical testing machine. The ultimate failure load and mode of failure were recorded. A t-test was used for statistical analysis.
The FW suture coupled both with absorbable and metallic anchors provides a statistically significant stronger fixation. However, while the metallic anchors in most cases fail due to the slippage of the anchor, absorbable anchors fail due to rupture of the loop. The FW seems to increase the strength of fixation devices under cyclic load both using absorbable or metallic anchors with relevant differences in failure mode (slippage of the metallic anchor and loop failure in absorbable ones). Using a FW suture, the risk of metallic anchor migration might increase.