Bending and abrasion fatigue of common suture materials used in arthroscopic and open orthopedic surgery

J Orthop Res. 2013 Jan;31(1):132-8. doi: 10.1002/jor.22185. Epub 2012 Jul 9.

Abstract

In orthopedic surgery, the reattachment of tendon to bone requires suture materials that have stable and durable properties to allow time for healing at the tendon-bone interface. The suture, not rigidly restrained within the anchor eyelet, is free to move during surgery and potentially after surgery with limb motion. During such movement, the suture is subjected to bending and frictional forces that can lead to fatigue-induced failure. We investigated some common contemporary commercial number-two-grade suture materials and evaluated their resistance to bending abrasion fatigue and the consequent failure. Sutures were oscillated over a stainless steel wire at low frequency under load. Number of abrasion cycles to failure, changes in suture morphology, and fatigue-failure method was recorded for each material. Suture structure had a significant effect on abrasion resistance, with braided sutures containing large numbers of fine high tenacity core filaments performing 15-20 times better than other braided suture structures. Ultra high molecular weight polyethylene (UHMWPE) core filaments resisted bending abrasion failure better than other core materials due to the load spreading and abrasion resistance of these filaments. Sutures with UHMWPE cores also had high resistance to tensile failure. Limited correlation was observed between tensile strength and abrasion resistance.

Publication types

  • Comparative Study
  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Arthroscopy / instrumentation*
  • Bone and Bones / surgery
  • Equipment Failure Analysis / methods*
  • Friction
  • Humans
  • Materials Testing
  • Polydioxanone / chemistry
  • Polyethylenes / chemistry
  • Sutures / adverse effects*
  • Tendons / surgery
  • Tensile Strength*
  • Weight-Bearing*

Substances

  • Polyethylenes
  • ultra-high molecular weight polyethylene
  • Polydioxanone