The Bone Bridge for Tibial ACL Graft Fixation: A Biomechanical Analysis of Different Tibial Fixation Methods for ACL Reconstruction.

Peez, Christian; Greßmann, Marvin; Raschke, Michael J.; Glasbrenner, Johannes; Briese, Thorben; Frank, Andre; Herbst, Elmar; Kittl, Christoph

Research article (journal) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

The tibial fixation site is considered the weak link in anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction, and conflicting results regarding the biomechanical properties of various fixation methods have been reported.; To examine knots tied over a bone bridge and its biomechanical properties as a suitable tibial fixation method in ACL reconstruction.; Controlled laboratory study.; We divided 40 fresh-frozen porcine tibiae into 4 equal groups to evaluate flexor tendon grafts set with standard tibial fixation techniques: (1) bone bridge (BB group), (2) suspension button (SB group), (3) combined interference screw and bone bridge (IFS/BB group), and (4) combined interference screw and suspension button (IFS/SB group). Each construct was subjected to cyclic loading (1500 cycles, 50-250 N, 1 Hz) with a servohydraulic materials testing machine to measure elongation; load-to-failure testing (displacement rate: 25 mm/s) was then performed. Load to failure, stiffness, and yield load were compared between constructs using 1-way analysis of variance.; < .05). Stiffness between the SB and BB groups was not significantly different.; Hybrid fixation had superior biomechanical performance compared with isolated extracortical fixation. However, tibial graft fixation using a bone bridge either as isolated extracortical fixation or combined with an interference screw for hybrid fixation showed equivalent biomechanical properties compared with suspension button-based graft fixation.; The clinical use of a bone bridge for tibial graft fixation could reduce the cost for ACL reconstruction and lower the rate of implant-associated issues. - BACKGROUND - PURPOSE - STUDY DESIGN - METHODS - RESULTS - CONCLUSION - CLINICAL RELEVANCE

Details about the publication

JournalOrthopaedic journal of sports medicine (Orthop J Sports Med)
Volume11
Issue1
StatusPublished
Release year2023
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish
DOI10.1177/23259671221143478
Keywordsanterior cruciate ligament; ACL reconstruction; bone bridge; graft fixation; hybrid fixation; biomechanics

Authors from the University of Münster

Briese, Thorben
Clinic for Accident, Hand- and Reconstructive Surgery
Frank, Andre
Clinic for Accident, Hand- and Reconstructive Surgery
Glasbrenner, Johannes
Clinic for Accident, Hand- and Reconstructive Surgery
Herbst, Elmar
Clinic for Accident, Hand- and Reconstructive Surgery
Kittl, Christoph
Clinic for Accident, Hand- and Reconstructive Surgery
Peez, Christian
Clinic for Accident, Hand- and Reconstructive Surgery
Raschke, Michael Johannes
Clinic for Accident, Hand- and Reconstructive Surgery