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Title: Biomechanical analysis of latissimus dorsi tendon transfer with and without superior capsule reconstruction using dermal allograft. Author: Omid R, Stone MA, Lin CC, Patel NA, Itami Y, McGarry MH, Lee TQ. Journal: J Shoulder Elbow Surg; 2019 Aug; 28(8):1523-1530. PubMed ID: 31029520. Abstract: BACKGROUND: Irreparable rotator cuff tears (ICTs) remain a challenging treatment dilemma. Superior capsule reconstruction (SCR) acts as a static stabilizer to decrease superior humeral head migration. Latissimus dorsi tendon transfers (LDTs) dynamically decrease superior humeral head migration and improve external rotation. We hypothesized that the dynamic stabilizing effect of the latissimus transfer plus the static stabilizing effect of SCR would improve shoulder kinematics in shoulders with ICTs. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Eight fresh-frozen cadaveric shoulders were tested in 5 conditions: (1) intact, (2) ICT (supraspinatus plus anterior half of infraspinatus), (3) SCR with dermal allograft, (4) SCR plus LDT, and (5) LDT alone. Rotational range of motion, superior translation, anteroposterior translation, and peak subacromial contact pressure were measured at 0°, 30°, and 60° of glenohumeral abduction in the scapular plane. Statistical analysis was performed using a repeated-measures analysis of variance test, followed by a Tukey post hoc test for pair-wise comparisons. RESULTS: ICTs increased total shoulder rotation, superior translation, posterior translation, and peak subacromial contact pressure. SCR plus LDT significantly decreased internal rotation only at 60° of abduction. The effect of SCR plus LDT was most evident at lower levels of abduction. At the mid range of abduction (30°), the static stabilizing effect diminished but the dynamic stabilizing effect remained, allowing SCR plus LDT to reduce superior translation more effectively than SCR with dermal allograft alone. CONCLUSIONS: Adding SCR to LDT adds static stabilization to a dynamic stabilizer. Therefore, SCR plus LDT may provide additional stability at the low to mid ranges of abduction.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]