Biomechanical Testing of a Novel Suture Pattern for Repair of Equine Tendon Lacerations

Authors
Eric Everett MS, DVM, Jennifer G. Barrett PhD, DVM, Diplomate ACVS, Jeffrey Morelli BS, Raffaella DeVita PhD
Date
February 2012
Journal
Veterinary Surgery
Volume
41
Number
2
Pages
278-285

To compare in vitro biomechanical properties of a novel suture pattern to a current standard for primary repair of equine superficial digital flexor tendon (SDFT) laceration.
Study Design
In vitro randomized, paired design.
Animals
Cadaveric equine forelimb SDFT (n = 24).
Methods
The 3-loop pulley (3LP) and 6-strand Savage (SSS) suture patterns were applied to transected equine SDFT. Ultimate failure load, stiffness, mode of failure, and load required to form a 3-mm gap were obtained using a materials testing system and synchronized high-speed video analysis. Statistical comparisons were made using Student's t-test, with significance set at P < .05.
Results
The SSS repair failed at a higher ultimate load (421.1 N ± 47.6) than the 3LP repair (193.7 N ± 43.0; P < .001). There was no significant difference in stiffness (P = .99). Failure mode was suture breakage for all SSS repair and suture pull through for all 3LP repair. The maximum load to create a 3-mm gap in the SSS repair (102.0 N ± 22.4) was not significantly different from the 3LP repair (109.9 N ± 16.0; P = .27).
Conclusions
SSS tenorrhaphy has improved strength and resistance to pull through compared with 3LP for equine SDFT in a single load-to-failure test. Load required to form a 3-mm gap was not significantly different between SSS and 3LP