Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
9928694 The Journal of Foot and Ankle Surgery 2005 8 Pages PDF
Abstract
Metal screws that are used for ruptured tibiofibular syndesmosis repair are often removed within 3 months of placement, suggesting the utility of bioabsorbable screws. A biomechanical study was performed to compare fixation of a simulated syndesmosis separation with a 5-mm oriented copolymer bioabsorbable (82:18 poly-L-lactic acid/poly-glycolic acid) versus a stainless steel screw. Eight pairs of cadaveric lower-leg specimens were cleaned and a pronation external rotation-type injury was created in each. The syndesmosis was fixed with a single, tricortical bioabsorbable screw in 1 ankle and a metal screw in the contralateral ankle (matched pairs). Sequential testing of the specimens showed that torsional stiffness of the fixed, relative to intact, specimens was nearly equivalent (0.730 ± 0.260 for copolymer, 0.770 ± 0.300 for stainless steel; P = .401). Application of 1000 cycles of axial load (90 to 900 N) resulted in a significant decrease (P < .0001) in axial stiffness for each fixation method, but the relative decrease was equivalent for both (P = .211). Failure torque (17.8 ± 8.3 N·m copolymer, 21.0 ± 11.5 N·m stainless steel; P = .238) and angle of rotation at failure (47.9 ± 13.6° copolymer, 42.0 ± 11.5° stainless steel; P = .199) were also nearly equivalent. It appears that the 5.0-mm diameter copolymer screw is biomechanically equivalent to the 5.0-mm diameter stainless steel screw for repair of syndesmosis disruption.
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Health Sciences Medicine and Dentistry Orthopedics, Sports Medicine and Rehabilitation
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