Background. The purpose of this study was to review patients with intermediate-and high-grade partial-thickness rotator cuff tears at 5 years following insertion of a highly-porous collagen implant on the bursal surface of the cuff to determine the durability of the clinical results and structural integrity of the healed tendons compared to their previously reported 2-year results. Methods. Eleven of the original 13 patients were examined after 5 years. Clinical scores (Constant and ASES) and MRI evaluations of tendon integrity and quality were compared to the two-year results. Results. All patients demonstrated statistically significant improvement in clinical scores compared to preoperative values. Mean Constant and ASES pain and function scores improved at 5 years but were not statistically different from the two-year scores. Eight of the 11 patients demonstrated no negative change in tendon quality on MRI. However, 3 patients had developed new, asymptomatic tears (1 low-grade articular, 2 low-grade intra-substance) of the supraspinatus tendon. Conclusions. This 5-year follow-up confirms the ongoing clinical benefit of this implant in the treatment of partial-thickness lesions of the rotator cuff and demonstrates ongoing structural tendon improvement, with most repaired tendons intact at five years.
CITATION STYLE
Bokor, D. J., Sonnabend, D. H., Deady, L., Cass, B., Young, A. A., Van Kampen, C. L., & Arnoczky, S. P. (2019). Healing of partial-thickness rotator cuff tears following arthroscopic augmentation with a highly-porous collagen implant: A 5-year clinical and mri follow-up. Muscles, Ligaments and Tendons Journal, 9(3), 338–347. https://doi.org/10.32098/mltj.03.2019.07
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