Lower Trapezius and Latissimus Dorsi Transfer relieve Teres Minor Activity into the Physiological Range in Collin D Irreparable Posterosuperior Massive Rotator Cuff Tears: A Biomechanical Analysis.

Menze, Johanna; Rojas, J Tomás; Ferguson, Stephen J; De Pieri, Enrico; Gerber, Kate; Zumstein, Matthias A (2024). Lower Trapezius and Latissimus Dorsi Transfer relieve Teres Minor Activity into the Physiological Range in Collin D Irreparable Posterosuperior Massive Rotator Cuff Tears: A Biomechanical Analysis. (In Press). Journal of shoulder and elbow surgery Elsevier 10.1016/j.jse.2024.03.019

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BACKGROUND

Tendon transfers are established techniques to regain external rotation mobility in patients suffering from an irreparable, posterosuperior massive rotator cuff tear (MRCT). Posterosuperior MRCT with intact teres minor (Type D MRCT) can lead to excessive teres minor loading to maintain external rotation. We hypothesize that tendon transfers are effective in relieving teres minor loading in Type D MRCTs. Our aim was to biomechanically assess muscle synergism with latissimus dorsi (LD-Transfer) and lower trapezius (LT-Transfer) tendon transfer during external rotation at different abduction heights.

METHODS

Using musculoskeletal modeling, we analyzed and compared the moment arm, muscle torque and muscle activity between a healthy and Type D MRCT pathological model with and without the LD- or LT-Transfer at infraspinatus and teres minor insertion sites. Output measures were analyzed during external rotation at different abduction angles and 10 to 50N resistance against external rotation. We assessed its impact on teres minor loading in a Type D MRCT. Morphological variations were parameterized using the critical shoulder angle and the acromiohumeral distance to address variations among patients.

RESULTS

Both transfer types reduced teres minor torque and activity significantly, reaching physiological state at 40N external resistance (p<0.001), with insertion to infraspinatus site being more effective than teres minor site (p<0.001). External rotation moment arms of LD-Transfer were larger than LT-Transfer at 90° abduction (25.1±0.8mm vs. 21.2±0.6mm, p<0.001) and vice versa at 0° abduction (17.4±0.5mm vs. 24.0±0.2mm, p<0.001). While the healthy infraspinatus was the main external rotator in all abduction angles (50-70% torque), a Type D MRCT resulted in a 70-90% increase of teres minor torque and an up to sevenfold increase in its activity leading to excessive loadings beyond 10N resistance against external rotation. Varying the critical shoulder angle and the acromiohumeral distance led to minor variations in muscle moment arm and muscle activity.

CONCLUSION

We identified biomechanical efficacy of both tendon transfers in Type D MRCT regarding teres minor load relieve and superior performance of the transfers at the infraspinatus insertion site.

Item Type:

Journal Article (Original Article)

Division/Institute:

04 Faculty of Medicine > Department of Orthopaedic, Plastic and Hand Surgery (DOPH) > Clinic of Orthopaedic Surgery
08 Faculty of Science > School of Biomedical and Precision Engineering (SBPE)

UniBE Contributor:

Menze, Johanna Franziska, Gerber, Kate, Zumstein, Matthias

Subjects:

600 Technology > 610 Medicine & health

ISSN:

1058-2746

Publisher:

Elsevier

Language:

English

Submitter:

Pubmed Import

Date Deposited:

23 Apr 2024 09:24

Last Modified:

09 Aug 2024 00:13

Publisher DOI:

10.1016/j.jse.2024.03.019

PubMed ID:

38642877

Uncontrolled Keywords:

external rotation tendon transfer techniques musculoskeletal modeling numerical biomechanics posterosuperior rotator cuff lesion

BORIS DOI:

10.48350/196134

URI:

https://boris.unibe.ch/id/eprint/196134

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