Dr Youn Research Articles

A Technical Trick

Arthroscopic Decompression

Biceps Rerouting

Functional and Radiologic Outcomes

Comorbidity Effects in Shoulder Manipulation

Retracted Rotator Cuff Tear

The Scissors Sign

Rotator Cuff Repairs

Effects of comorbidities

Medialized vs. Lateralized Humeral Implant

Posterior Compression Test

A Comparative Animal Model Study

Functional Outcomes of Reverse Shoulder

The Superomedial Bare area of the Costal Scapula Surface

Rotator cuff repairs with all-suture tape anchors: no difference in outcomes between with or without all-suture tape anchors

Abstract

Purpose: This study aimed at comparing the outcomes of medium- to large-sized rotator cuff repairs performed using the suture bridge technique either with or without tape-like sutures, and single row techniques with conventional sutures.

Methods: A total of 135 eligible patients with medium to large rotator cuff tears were identified and analyzed retrospectively, from 2017 to 2019. Only repairs using all-suture anchors were included in the study. Patients were divided into the following three groups: single-row (SR) repair (N = 50), standard double-row suture bridge (DRSB) repair with conventional sutures (N = 35), and DRSB with tape-like sutures (N = 50). The average postoperative follow-up period was 26.3 ± 9.8 months (range, 18-37).

Results: DRSB with tapes had the highest re-tear rate of 16% (8/50), but there was no significant difference with the re-tear rates observed in SR (8%, 4/50) and DRSB with conventional sutures (11.4%, 4/35) (n.s.). DRSB with tapes demonstrated higher rate of type 2 re-tears (10%) compared to type 1 re-tears (6%), but the other two groups showed either similar or higher rates of type 1 re-tears compared to that of type 2. Post-operative functional scores of the three groups improved significantly (all p < 0.05), but the differences between the groups were not statistically significant.

Conclusions: No clinical difference in functional outcomes and re-tear rates were observed in DRSB with tapes when compared with SR and DRSB using the conventional sutures. Tape-like DRSB suture which was expected to be superior by its biomechanical advantage was clinically non-superior to conventional DRSB suture. There were no significant differences in VAS scores and UCLA scores.

Level of evidence: Level III.

Keywords: All-suture type anchor; Double-row suture bridge repair; Rotator cuff repair; Tape-like suture.