Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Washington University, St. Louis, MO 63110, United States; Department of Biomedical Engineering, Washington University, St. Louis, MO 63130, United States.
Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Columbia University, New York, NY 10032, United States; Department of Biomedical Engineering, Columbia University, New York, NY 10027, United States.
Acta Biomater. 2018 Apr 1;70:165-176. doi: 10.1016/j.actbio.2018.01.032. Epub 2018 Feb 8.
Tendon-to-bone surgical repairs have unacceptably high failure rates, possibly due to their inability to recreate the load transfer mechanisms of the native enthesis. Instead of distributing load across a wide attachment footprint area, surgical repairs concentrate shear stress on a small number of suture anchor points. This motivates development of technologies that distribute shear stresses away from suture anchors and across the enthesis footprint. Here, we present predictions and proof-of-concept experiments showing that mechanically-optimized adhesive films can mimic the natural load transfer mechanisms of the healthy attachment and increase the load tolerance of a repair. Mechanical optimization, based upon a shear lag model corroborated by a finite element analysis, revealed that adhesives with relatively high strength and low stiffness can, theoretically, strengthen tendon-to-bone repairs by over 10-fold. Lap shear testing using tendon and bone planks validated the mechanical models for a range of adhesive stiffnesses and strengths. Ex vivo human supraspinatus repairs of cadaveric tissues using multipartite adhesives showed substantial increase in strength. Results suggest that adhesive-enhanced repair can improve repair strength, and motivate a search for optimal adhesives.
Current surgical techniques for tendon-to-bone repair have unacceptably high failure rates, indicating that the initial repair strength is insufficient to prevent gapping or rupture. In the rotator cuff, repair techniques apply compression over the repair interface to achieve contact healing between tendon and bone, but transfer almost all force in shear across only a few points where sutures puncture the tendon. Therefore, we evaluated the ability of an adhesive film, implanted between tendon and bone, to enhance repair strength and minimize the likelihood of rupture. Mechanical models demonstrated that optimally designed adhesives would improve repair strength by over 10-fold. Experiments using idealized and clinically-relevant repairs validated these models. This work demonstrates an opportunity to dramatically improve tendon-to-bone repair strength using adhesive films with appropriate material properties.
肌腱-骨手术修复的失败率高得令人无法接受,这可能是由于它们无法重建天然附着点的负荷传递机制。手术修复不是将负荷分布在广泛的附着足印区域,而是将剪切应力集中在少数缝线锚点上。这促使人们开发了将剪切应力从缝线锚点分散并穿过附着足印的技术。在这里,我们提出了预测和概念验证实验,表明机械优化的胶粘剂膜可以模拟健康附着的自然负荷传递机制,并提高修复的负荷耐受性。基于剪切滞后模型的机械优化,并通过有限元分析得到证实,表明具有相对高强度和低刚度的胶粘剂理论上可以使肌腱-骨修复的强度提高 10 倍以上。使用肌腱和骨板进行的搭接剪切测试验证了一系列胶粘剂刚度和强度的机械模型。使用多部分胶粘剂对尸体组织进行的体外人肩袖修复实验表明,强度有了实质性提高。结果表明,增强型胶粘剂修复可以提高修复强度,并促使人们寻找最佳的胶粘剂。
目前用于肌腱-骨修复的手术技术的失败率高得令人无法接受,这表明初始修复强度不足以防止间隙或破裂。在肩袖中,修复技术在修复界面上施加压缩力,以实现肌腱和骨之间的接触愈合,但几乎所有的力都以剪切的形式通过仅几个缝线刺穿肌腱的点传递。因此,我们评估了一种胶粘剂膜,植入在肌腱和骨之间,以增强修复强度并最小化破裂的可能性。机械模型表明,最佳设计的胶粘剂将使修复强度提高 10 倍以上。使用理想化和临床相关修复的实验验证了这些模型。这项工作表明,使用具有适当材料特性的胶粘剂膜有机会显著提高肌腱-骨修复强度。