articleJournal of Bone and Joint SurgeryMay 1, 2007Closed access

Repair Integrity and Functional Outcome After Arthroscopic Double-Row Rotator Cuff Repair

Funabashi Orthopaedic Hospital

PubMed
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Abstract

Background

The retear rate following rotator cuff repair is variable. Recent biomechanical studies have demonstrated that double-row tendon-to-bone fixation excels in initial fixation strength and footprint coverage compared with the single-row or transosseous fixation methods. This study was designed to report the repair integrity and clinical outcome following arthroscopic double-row rotator cuff repair.

Methods

A consecutive series of 106 patients with full-thickness rotator cuff tears underwent arthroscopic double-row rotator cuff repair with use of suture anchors and were followed prospectively. Twenty patients lacked complete follow-up data or were lost to follow-up. The eighty-six study subjects included fifty-two men and thirty-four women, with an average age of 60.5 years. There were twenty-six small, thirty medium, twenty-two large, and eight massive tears. Clinical outcomes were evaluated at an average of thirty-one months. Repair integrity was estimated with use of magnetic resonance imaging, which was performed, on the average, fourteen months postoperatively, and was classified into five categories, with type I indicating sufficient thickness with homogeneously low intensity; type II, sufficient thickness with partial high intensity; type III, insufficient thickness without discontinuity; type IV, the presence of a minor discontinuity; and type V, the presence of a major discontinuity.

Citation impact

844
total citations
FWCI
29.55
Percentile
100%
References
27
Citations per year

Authors

4

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Rotator cuff
  • Medicine
  • Surgery
  • Fixation (population genetics)
  • Magnetic resonance imaging
  • Tears
  • Tendon
  • Arthroscopy
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