J Knee Surg 2011; 24(1): 055-060
DOI: 10.1055/s-0031-1275400
ORIGINAL ARTICLE

© Thieme Medical Publishers

Water-Tight Knee Arthrotomy Closure: Comparison of a Novel Single Bidirectional Barbed Self-Retaining Running Suture Versus Conventional Interrupted Sutures

Michael Nett1 , Rui Avelar2 , Michael Sheehan3 , Fred Cushner1
  • 1Department of Orthopaedics, Insall Scott Kelly Institute for Orthopaedics and Sports Medicine, New York, New York
  • 2Angiotech Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
  • 3North Shore-LIJ Bioskills Education Center, Lake Success, New York
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Publikationsdatum:
21. März 2011 (online)

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ABSTRACT

Standard medial parapatellar arthrotomies of 10 cadaveric knees were closed with either conventional interrupted absorbable sutures (control group, mean of 19.4 sutures) or a single running knotless bidirectional barbed absorbable suture (experimental group). Water-tightness of the arthrotomy closure was compared by simulating a tense hemarthrosis and measuring arthrotomy leakage over 3 minutes. Mean total leakage was 356 mL and 89 mL in the control and experimental groups, respectively (p = 0.027). Using 8 of the 10 knees (4 closed with control sutures, 4 closed with an experimental suture), a tense hemarthrosis was again created, and iatrogenic suture rupture was performed: a proximal suture was cut at 1 minute; a distal suture was cut at 2 minutes. The impact of suture rupture was compared by measuring total arthrotomy leakage over 3 minutes. Mean total leakage was 601 mL and 174 mL in the control and experimental groups, respectively (p = 0.3). In summary, using a cadaveric model, arthrotomies closed with a single bidirectional barbed running suture were statistically significantly more water-tight than those closed using a standard interrupted technique. The sample size was insufficient to determine whether the two closure techniques differed in leakage volume after suture rupture.

REFERENCES

Fred CushnerM.D. 

Department of Orthopaedics, Insall Scott Kelly Institute for Orthopaedics and Sports Medicine

210 East 64th Street, 4th Floor, New York, NY 10065

eMail: fcush@att.net