Evaluating barbed sutures: A porcine biomechanical comparison of Z-plasty and turndown flap according to Silfverskiöld
Henry V. Bürger, Jahnke Alexander, Harz Torben, Carlos A. Fonseca-Ulloa, Markus Rickert, Dirk Stolz

TL;DR
This study compares barbed sutures to traditional ones in tendon repair techniques, showing improved strength and fewer complications.
Contribution
The study introduces a biomechanical comparison of barbed sutures in Z-plasty and turndown flap techniques using a porcine model.
Findings
Z-plasty with Stratafix barbed sutures showed a 32% improvement in maximum force compared to traditional PDS sutures.
Z-plasty outperformed turndown flap in maximum force when using Stratafix sutures.
Barbed sutures reduced the risk of complications from suture knots.
Abstract
It is not possible to add an infinite amount of suture material to tendon plasties and repairs in vivo. Each additional knot can reduce the tensile strength by up to 50 %. Therefore, barbed sutures, as a knotless suturing system, should be investigated as a potential alternative to traditional sutures to minimize knot-related weakening. Superficial porcine flexors were randomized into five groups. A non-contact measurement was utilized. The Z-plasty and the turndown flap according to Silfverskiöld were used. The Stratafix barbed knotless suture was compared to regular smooth polydioxanone. The biomechanical protocol included a creep test, a cyclic test, and a tear-off test. The Z-plasty with Stratafix showed significantly improved maximum force compared to the Z-plasty with Polydioxanon (PDS 108.5 ± 22.2N, Stratafix 142.3 ± 23.5N, p < .01). The Z-plasty was significantly superior to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSurgical Sutures and Adhesives · Reconstructive Surgery and Microvascular Techniques · Orthopedic Surgery and Rehabilitation
