• Foot Ankle Int · Dec 2010

    Core weave versus Krackow technique for Achilles tendon repair: a biomechanical study.

    • Yuhwan Hong, Luis Hermida, Kacey L White, Brent G Parks, Lyn M Camire, and Camire Guyton.
    • Union Memorial Hospital Orthopaedics, Baltimore, MD 21211, USA.
    • Foot Ankle Int. 2010 Dec 1; 31 (12): 1107-10.

    BackgroundThe Krackow stitch, commonly used for Achilles tendon repair, leaves the bulk of the stitch on the surface of the tendon as a possible nidus for adhesion. The proposed core weave stitch leaves a minimal amount of suture material on the tendon surface. The functional strength of the core weave stitch compared with the Krackow and the optimal number of throws, or stitches crossing the surface of the tendon, with this stitch are not known.Materials And MethodsTwenty-one matched pairs of fresh-frozen cadaveric Achilles tendons were transected and randomly assigned to receive a 4-stranded stitch, either Krackow or core weave, with three, five, or seven throws. The samples were cyclically loaded to 75, 125 and 175 N for 1000 cycles at each load until failure, defined as 5 mm of elongation.ResultsNo significant difference in failure load was observed between the Krackow and core weave groups at any number of throws or within the groups based on number of throws. Failure load for the different number of throws in the Krackow group approached significance (p = 0.10), with higher failure load with three throws.ConclusionFunctional strength of the core weave stitch and the Krackow stitch did not differ between groups with three, five, and seven throws. There was no significant difference in strength based on throws in either group.Clinical RelevanceThe proposed core weave stitch provides functional strength similar to that of the Krackow stitch for tendon repair with reduced suture material on the tendon surface.

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