1. The "purse string" technique for anterior glenohumeral instability: long-term results 7–13-year follow-up.
- Author
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Panagopoulos, Georgios, Picca, Girolamo, Adamczyk, Aleksandra, Leonidou, Andreas, Consigliere, Paolo, Sforza, Giuseppe, Atoun, Ehud, Rath, Ehud, and Levy, Ofer
- Subjects
EVALUATION of medical care ,SHOULDER injuries ,JOINT instability ,ARTHROSCOPY ,TELEPHONES ,OPERATIVE surgery ,SURGERY ,PATIENTS ,INTERVIEWING ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,ACQUISITION of data ,GLENOHUMERAL joint ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,MEDICAL records ,CASE studies ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Purpose: The "Purse-String Technique" (PST) is an arthroscopic horizontal mattress suture technique for recurrent anterior shoulder instability that uses a single double-loaded suture anchor at the 4-o' clock position, achieving a Bankart labral repair and an infero-superior capsular shift. In this study, we describe the long-term results of the PST. Methods: The study included 69 individuals (70 shoulders), with a mean age of 30 years, who had recurrent post-traumatic anteroinferior instability. A purse-string suture anchor at the 4-o'clock position was used to address the Bankart lesion and capsular laxity, recreating the anterior glenoid bumper. All patients were assessed via telephone interview at a mean of 116 months after surgery (7–13-year follow-up). Results: Postoperatively, the mean Constant score was 94, mean Rowe score was 93 and mean Walch–Duplay score was 89. 89% of patients resumed their preinjury sport activities, with 61% of patients achieving preinjury levels and most professional athletes returning to full activity. Seven patients had recurrent dislocation postoperatively (10% failure rate). Of these patients, three had revision arthroscopic stabilization, one patient had revision arthroscopic stabilization with remplissage, two had a Latarjet procedure, whereas one patient decided to seek no further treatment. Conclusion: The long-term results of PST are promising, with a low failure rate, high patient satisfaction and a high rate of return to sport. Level of evidence: Level IV; Case series; Treatment study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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