Showing posts with label stress relaxation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label stress relaxation. Show all posts

Thursday, June 4, 2020

Partical thickness cuff tears: to repair or not to repair?

A comparative study of arthroscopic debridement versus repair for Ellman grade II bursal-side partial-thickness rotator cuff tears

These authors reported the clinical outcomes of arthroscopic debridement vs. repair for Ellman grade II bursal-side partial thickness rotator cuff tears.



On the basis of preoperative findings and patient preference, 20 patients underwent debridement whereas 26 underwent arthroscopic repair. 

All 46 patients were available throughout follow-up. At 2 years postoperatively, the VAS score had improved from 6.42 to 0.65 0.51 in the debridement group and from 6.26 to 0.75 in the repair group. The average VAS score was worse for the repair group at 6 months postoperatively. 
The American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons score, Constant score, and University of California–Los Angeles scores were worse for the repaired group at 6 months postoperatively.

















At followup, there was no difference in the cuff integrity between the repaired and debrided groups.


Based on their results, the authors question the rationale for repair of these lesions.

Comment: While this is not a randomized clinical trial it does indicate that debridement can be an effective treatment for these partial thickness cuff tears. The inferior outcomes for the first 6 months after repair surgery serve to remind us that when a cuff defect is repaired, the cuff tension is shifted from the intact tendon to the repaired tendon. Pain and functional limitation associated with preferential loading of the repair subsides when the stress is relaxed, either by failure of the repair or by stretching of the repaired musculotendinous unit. See this related article , "Failure With Continuity in Rotator Cuff Repair "Healing" "(link). 13 patients had arthroscopic repair of small tears. At the time of the repair, tantalum markers were placed in the substance of the tendon. The markers of all repaired tendons retracted away from the suture anchors over the first year. The average retraction was 16.1 mm with a range of 5.7 to 23.2 mm. Tendon retraction correlated with patient age. As reported previously for open repairs, most of the retraction occurred during the early phases of recovery (i.e. 12 weeks). 

The stress relaxation hypothesis is consistent with these observations:

Consider this diagram of a cuff tear where the orange part of the cuff has pulled away from the blue tuberosity leaving the red portions of the cuff intact.



The surgeon repairs the torn (orange) part of the cuff to the tuberosity, but in doing so, takes the normal tension off of the intact (red) portions of the cuff and causing the repaired portion to support the load applied by the cuff musculature.


Stress relaxation must occur so that the normal portions of the cuff are under physiologic load. This can happen by recurrence of the cuff defect, as diagrammed below (this may be the situation in older individuals with larger cuff defects)


or by 'failure in continuity' in which the torn (orange) and intact (red) portions of the cuff progressively return to their original position, but that new regenerative tissue (green) tissue forms as the edge of the torn tendon pulls away from the footprint (this may be the situation for younger patients with smaller defects).




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Saturday, January 12, 2013

Healing of rotator cuff repair

Failure with continuity in rotator cuff repair "healing

The authors observe that as many as seventy percent of rotator cuff repairs demonstrate a recurrent defect after attempted repair. In 14 patients having arthroscopic cuff repair of tears ranging from 2-4 cm they inserted tantalum markers in the repaired tendon to measure the prevalence, timing, and magnitude of tendon retraction after rotator cuff repair and correlated the retraction with formation of a full-thickness recurrent tendon defect on magnetic resonance imaging and with clinical outcomes.

The postoperative protocol was prospectively defined to include use of a sling or small abduction pillow for 6 weeks. Patients were allowed use of the operative arm at waist level for simple activities of daily living. Active range of motion or weighted use of the arm for lifting, reaching, pushing, or pulling was restricted during the first 6 weeks.

All repaired tendons retracted away from the position of initial fixation during the first year after surgery (mean [standard deviation], 16.1 [5.3] mm; range, 5.7-23.2 mm), yet only 30% of patients formed a recurrent defect. Patients who formed a recurrent defect tended to have more tendon retraction during the first 6 weeks after surgery (9.7 [6.0] mm) than those who did not form a defect (4.1 [2.2] mm) (P = .08), but the total magnitude of tendon retraction was not significantly different between patient groups at 52 weeks. There was no significant correlation between the magnitude of tendon retraction and the Penn score (r = 0.01, P = .97) or normalized scapular abduction strength (r = -0.21, P = .58). Shoulders with a recurrent defect tended to have lower Penn scores at 52 weeks but this was not statistically significant (P = .1).

 "Failure with continuity" (tendon retraction without a recurrent defect) appears to be a common phenomenon after rotator cuff repair. The authors suggest that repairs should be protected in the early postoperative period and repair strategies should endeavor to mechanically and biologically augment the repair during this critical early period, but the efficacy of these approaches remains to be demonstrated.

It was of particular interest that for both the 'without recurrent defect' and the 'recurrent defect' groups, tendon retraction continued to occur out to 26 weeks after repair. Concurrently, the Penn outcome score  continued to improve out to 26 weeks after repair.

It was also of interest that the degree of retraction tended to be greater for bigger tears, as shown below in a plot we made from the authors' data.

This suggest that the retraction observed after repair may be related to "stress relaxation" as we previously proposed - in other words, the repair of a tendon defect places supraphysiologic load on the repaired tendon. Over time, this load is reduced by retraction of the tendon away from the site of its surgical re-insertion until the tension in the tendon is within physiological limits. If this is correct, it suggests that attention needs to be directed at minimizing the tension of the repaired tendon by releases and by avoiding the temptation to 'pull the tendon tight' to a lateral insertion site.

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Sunday, October 21, 2012

Failure With Continuity in Rotator Cuff Repair "Healing"

Failure With Continuity in Rotator Cuff Repair "Healing" The American Journal of Sports Medicine (ASJM) recently published this most interesting study of 13 patients having arthroscopic cuff repairs. The repaired tendon defects were 1-4 cm full thickness tears of the supraspinatus and/or infraspinatus with less than 2 cm of retraction, i.e. these were tears that were relatively small and reparable.

At the time of the repair, tantalum markers were placed in the substance of the tendon. Post operative sequential CT scans were used to measure the distance between each marker and the suture anchor nearest to it.  This 'anchor bead distance' has been shown by the authors to have an uncertainty of +/- 3 mm on repeat positioning and rescanning of patients with cuff repairs. If this distance increases over time after surgery, it indicates separation of the marked segment of the tendon from the tuberosity in which the anchor was placed. 

The authors also obtained sequential MRIs to search for defects in the repaired tendon.

They found that the markers of all repaired tendons retracted away from the suture anchors over the first year. The average retraction was 16.1 mm with a range of 5.7 to 23.2 mm. Tendon retraction correlated with patient age. As reported previously for open repairs, most of the retraction occurred during the early phases of recovery (i.e. 12 weeks). The amount of retraction did not correlate with the Penn score or with the abduction strength. The authors, as have others, suggest  the need for protection of the repair during the early rehab period. However, it is yet to be determined which post operative protocol is ideal.

It is worth pondering why this retraction might occur. When we look a chronic cuff defect, such as the one below, there is loss of some of the length of the torn tendon due to resorption and retraction. Thus  in order to approximate the torn edge to the footprint at the tuberosity, we place the repaired tendon under greater tension than the intact tendon on either side of it. Therefore, with either static or dynamic loading the pull of the cuff muscles is preferentially applied to the repaired tendon. This would tend to accentuate the problem of suture tension overload encountered during recovery. Perhaps if the resulting creep of the tendon away from the repair site took place at a slow rate, it would allow the body to 'backfill' the resulting gap resulting in 'failure with continuity'.





As interesting as the data on retraction are, the more interesting finding is that 30% of the shoulders had recurrent defects, even though these tears seemed eminently reparable. The shoulders with recurrent tears had lower Penn scores than those with intact cuffs at 52 weeks. Patients with larger tears had a greater chance of having a recurrent defect, although all of the tears repaired in this series would generally be classified as small (mean preoperative tear size of those with recurrent defects was 3.5 mm whereas the mean preoperative tear size of those without recurrent defects was 2.6 mm). The observation of tear recurrence after repair is consistent with previous observations (here and here and here and here) and with the report in 1991 by Harryman, that a substantial number of repaired cuffs do not remain intact after surgery. For example, Harryman found that after open repair of cuffs similar to those in this study, 20% of the shoulders had recurrent defects by ultrasound at 5 years after surgery (he also found that 60% of repaired large tears had recurrent defects at 5 years). 

So once again we are faced with the fact that even in the hands of very experienced surgeons using the most modern repair methods, recurrent defects after repair are common (4 out of 13).

On reflection of all of the above, it seems that a stress relaxation hypothesis may be consistent with the observations.

Consider this diagram of a cuff tear where the orange part of the cuff has pulled away from the blue tuberosity leaving the red portions of the cuff intact.



The surgeon repairs the torn (orange) part of the cuff to the tuberosity, but in doing so, takes the normal tension off of the intact (red) portions of the cuff and causing the repaired portion to support the load applied by the cuff musculature.


Stress relaxation must occur so that the normal portions of the cuff are under physiologic load. This can happen by recurrence of the cuff defect, as diagrammed below (this may be the situation in older individuals with larger cuff defects)


or by 'failure in continuity' in which the torn (orange) and intact (red) portions of the cuff progressively return to their original position, but that new regenerative tissue (green) tissue forms as the edge of the torn tendon pulls away from the footprint (this may be the situation for younger patients with smaller defects).



As we know some cuff tears are like the wall in Frost's poem - they just don't want to be repaired

MENDING WALL

Robert Frost


Something there is that doesn't love a wall,
That sends the frozen-ground-swell under it,
And spills the upper boulders in the sun,
And makes gaps even two can pass abreast.
The work of hunters is another thing:
I have come after them and made repair
Where they have left not one stone on a stone,
But they would have the rabbit out of hiding,
To please the yelping dogs. The gaps I mean,
No one has seen them made or heard them made,
But at spring mending-time we find them there.
I let my neighbor know beyond the hill;
And on a day we meet to walk the line
And set the wall between us once again.
We keep the wall between us as we go.
To each the boulders that have fallen to each.
And some are loaves and some so nearly balls
We have to use a spell to make them balance:
'Stay where you are until our backs are turned!'
We wear our fingers rough with handling them.
Oh, just another kind of out-door game,
One on a side. It comes to little more:
There where it is we do not need the wall:
He is all pine and I am apple orchard.
My apple trees will never get across
And eat the cones under his pines, I tell him.
He only says, 'Good fences make good neighbors'.
Spring is the mischief in me, and I wonder
If I could put a notion in his head:
'Why do they make good neighbors? Isn't it
Where there are cows?
But here there are no cows.
Before I built a wall I'd ask to know
What I was walling in or walling out,
And to whom I was like to give offence.
Something there is that doesn't love a wall,
That wants it down.' I could say 'Elves' to him,
But it's not elves exactly, and I'd rather
He said it for himself. I see him there
Bringing a stone grasped firmly by the top
In each hand, like an old-stone savage armed.
He moves in darkness as it seems to me~
Not of woods only and the shade of trees.
He will not go behind his father's saying,
And he likes having thought of it so well
He says again, "Good fences make good neighbors."

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