Arthroscopic Rotator Cuff Repair Using the Suture Loop Shuttle Technique |
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Authors: | Raymond Thal W. Bryan Jennings Wendy L. Heusch |
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Affiliation: | 1. Town Center Orthopaedic Associates, Reston, Virginia, U.S.A.;2. Orthopaedic Research of Virginia, Richmond, Virginia, U.S.A. |
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Abstract: | With the arthroscope in the posterior portal, several suture loops are passed through the rotator cuff via the superior lateral portal before the first anchor is inserted. The suture loop is created by passing both free ends of a No. 2 monofilament (48-inch Prolene, Ethilon, or PDS; Ethicon, Somerville, NJ) suture into an arthroscopic suture passing device. The free ends and the loop of each suture loop are temporarily transferred into the anterior cannula. Anchor insertion and passage of the anchored sutures are performed from posterior to anterior. With standard suture anchors, the loop end of the suture loop must be located on the undersurface of the cuff. The suture anchors are inserted one at a time through the superior lateral portal and are placed into the prepared holes. Anchored sutures are temporarily pulled out through the inferior lateral portal. Next, the free ends of the most posterior suture loop are retrieved through the superior lateral portal. The looped end of this suture loop is retrieved through the inferior lateral portal. The suture loop is used to shuttle a single anchored suture through the rotator cuff and out through the superior lateral portal. Then, the other anchored suture is retrieved through the superior lateral portal with a suture grasper and tied. |
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Keywords: | Shoulder arthroscopy Arthroscopic rotator cuff repair |
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