2019
DOI: 10.1016/j.arthro.2019.05.049
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How Much Will High Tension Adversely Affect Rotator Cuff Repair Integrity?

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Cited by 37 publications
(32 citation statements)
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References 26 publications
(24 reference statements)
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“…A recent study by Park et al 20 found that the repair tension was the most important factor for the integrity of rotator cuff repair. Consequently, a medial row sutures tied over an anatomically reduced tendon without over tension is the main goal.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…A recent study by Park et al 20 found that the repair tension was the most important factor for the integrity of rotator cuff repair. Consequently, a medial row sutures tied over an anatomically reduced tendon without over tension is the main goal.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…This is attainable by placing a repositioning or reduction anchor before tying the medial row. A recent study by Park et al 29 found that repair tension was the most important factor for the integrity of rotator cuff repair.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…I n their article "How Much of a High Tension Will Adversely Affect the Rotator Cuff Repair Integrity?" 1 Park, Shim, and Seok, from the Republic of Korea, have provided a quantitative perspective to the case for making every effort to minimize the tension required to approximate our rotator cuff repairs. In a single-surgeon series of 50 repairs of >3 cm tears that needed extensive soft-tissue releases to approximate the rotator cuff to the greater tuberosity, they found that when they applied the receiver operating curve method of statistical analysis to tendons that were healed versus those that re-tore (based on magnetic resonance imaging at more than 1 year postoperatively), the repairs that had greater tension (measured at the time of repair) were more often re-torn, with 35 N being the number bracketed by statistics as the bar to try to get below.…”
Section: See Related Article On Page 2992mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The low end of their confidence interval is where I'm happiest with repair tension (5 N is a little over a pound) and is a number that those who measure tension intraoperatively should shoot for. Park et al 1 should be congratulated for beginning the process of nailing down the threshold tension, and I hope others measure and publish their results so that we can narrow the confidence intervals and increase our intraoperative confidence that we're doing everything possible to promote healing. Like other authors, Park et al 1 also found that even the patients who re-tore their cuffs did well according to patient-reported outcome measures, so we shouldn't abandon a repair attempt if things get tense.…”
Section: See Related Article On Page 2992mentioning
confidence: 99%
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