TY - JOUR
T1 - The “Sandwich Tenodesis”
T2 - An Arthroscopic Technic for Combined Soft-Tissue and Bony Fixation of the Long Head of the Biceps
AU - Chevallier, Romain
AU - Calo, Miche
AU - Srikumaran, Uma
AU - Nayar, Suresh
AU - Nourissat, Geoffroy
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors report the following potential conflicts of interest or sources of funding: U.S. reports personal fees and other from Tigon Medical; personal fees from Conventus, Fx Shoulder USA, and Orthofix, grants from DePuy/Synthes, Arthrex, and Wright, grants and personal fees from Smith & Nephew; personal fees from Heron and Pacira; and grants from ASES and OMEGA, outside the submitted work. In addition, U.S. has patents pending from Conventus, Fx Shoulder USA, and Tigon Medical. Full ICMJE author disclosure forms are available for this article online, as supplementary material.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 Arthroscopy Association of North America
PY - 2021/2
Y1 - 2021/2
N2 - Pathology of the long head of the biceps can contribute to substantial shoulder pain. After nonoperative treatment has failed, either open or arthroscopic tenotomy or tenodesis can be recommended depending on age, occupation, function, and cosmetic preference. While classic tenodesis techniques rely on tendon-to-bone fixation, multiple studies have shown superior healing results for fixation between similar types of tissue, such as tendon-to-tendon. In this technique, we present the “sandwich technique,” performed entirely arthroscopically. A single 4-strand anchor with bioabsorbable screw is used to provide 2 types of fixation. Two strands are first used to lasso-loop the long head of the biceps to the bicipital groove, providing bone-to-tendon fixation. The other strands are then used to anchor rotator interval tissue to the tendon, providing a similar tissue or tendon-to-tendon patch augmentation.
AB - Pathology of the long head of the biceps can contribute to substantial shoulder pain. After nonoperative treatment has failed, either open or arthroscopic tenotomy or tenodesis can be recommended depending on age, occupation, function, and cosmetic preference. While classic tenodesis techniques rely on tendon-to-bone fixation, multiple studies have shown superior healing results for fixation between similar types of tissue, such as tendon-to-tendon. In this technique, we present the “sandwich technique,” performed entirely arthroscopically. A single 4-strand anchor with bioabsorbable screw is used to provide 2 types of fixation. Two strands are first used to lasso-loop the long head of the biceps to the bicipital groove, providing bone-to-tendon fixation. The other strands are then used to anchor rotator interval tissue to the tendon, providing a similar tissue or tendon-to-tendon patch augmentation.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.eats.2020.10.040
DO - 10.1016/j.eats.2020.10.040
M3 - Article
C2 - 33680792
AN - SCOPUS:85099965047
SN - 2212-6287
VL - 10
SP - e555-e559
JO - Arthroscopy Techniques
JF - Arthroscopy Techniques
IS - 2
ER -