Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Ex vivo mechanical testing of double strand, braided and knitted polyethylene suture for acute transverse section of the Achilles tendon in a dog model.
- Year:
- 2025
- Authors:
- Abd El-Aziz MY et al.
- Affiliation:
- Clothing and Knitting Industrial Research Department
- Species:
- dog
Abstract
<h4>Background</h4>Acute tendon cut represents a great challenge both in human and veterinary medical practice. The current study aimed to compare the ultimate biomechanical properties (tensile strength, elongation, stress load, yield load and break load) of double strand, braided and knitted polyethylene suture in an ex vivo model of acute transverse section of the Achilles tendon in dog model using locking loop suture and three-loop pulley suture.<h4>Methods</h4>A-thirty-six Achilles tendon was transected from 18 dog cadavers. Tendon samples were randomly allocated (6 tendons/group) to be sutured either by double strand, braided and novel knitted formation techniques from polyethylene suture using either three-loop pulley suture or locking loop suture patterns. Biomechanical testing of different yarn for tensile strength, elongation, stress, yield load, break load was performed.<h4>Results</h4>Braided polyethylene sutures demonstrated superior biomechanical properties, showing the highest maximum tension, load, stress, and yield load, while knitted sutures exhibited the greatest strain and elongation due to their looped structure. Despite the knitted yarn's high elongation, its tensile strength and load-bearing capabilities were significantly lower. Overall, yarn formation had a greater influence on biomechanical performance in association with suturing technique. The three-loop pulley suturing demonstrated significantly improved suturing outcomes.<h4>Conclusion</h4>Both novel knitted, and braided suture structure demonstrated improved biomechanical properties of tendon suturing by increasing the number of strands within the tendon, simplifying the suturing process, reducing the needle passes, and minimizing tendon punctures that may interfere with healing and the overall strength. Suturing technique had a major influence on the biomechanical properties where the three-loop pulley suture demonstrated superior biomechanical properties compared to locking loop suturing.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://europepmc.org/article/MED/40442722