## Abstract We investigated the effects of two suture techniques using three suture types in a human model in vitro. We obtained 60 flexor digitorum profundus (FDP) tendons from cadavers and measured the gliding resistance during 1,000 cycles of simulated flexion–extension motion and load to failur
Restoration of function of the thumb flexor apparatus requires repair of the oblique and one adjacent flexor tendon pulley
✍ Scribed by V. S. Esplin; A. F. Tencer; D. P. Hanel; M. Q. Cosio
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1996
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 484 KB
- Volume
- 14
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0736-0266
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✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Damage to the pulleys of the thumb flexor apparatus may cause bow‐stringing of the tendon and affect muscle function. An experiment using the hands and distal forearms of cadavers was designed to determine which damaged pulleys increase excursion length of the flexor tendon with constant tendon and resisting loads. Each specimen was mounted to a loading frame with a dead weight pinned to the tip of the thumb. The thumb flexor tendon was clamped to an actuator that applied a fixed load and measured excursion of the tendon. Ranges of motion of the thumb joint were also measured. The thumb flexor apparatus of each specimen was tested intact first, with the hand in flexed, neutral, and extended positions; then it was tested with progressive sectioning of pulleys from proximal to distal in one group and from distal to proximal in a second group. The length of excursion increased significantly with all pulleys cut but there was no effect on on overall range of motion of the thumb. With proximal to distal sectioning, no change in tendon excursion occurred when the flexor retinaculum and the first annular pulleys were cut, until the oblique pulley was sectioned, leadving only the second annular pulley intact (range, 1.17–1.31 times that of intact excursion, dependent on position of the hand). With distal to proximal sectioning, tendon excursion was not affected when the second annular and oblique pulleys were cut but did increase when the first annular pulley was sectioned, leaving only the flexor retinaculum intact (range, 1.28–1.36 times that of intact excursion). Dependent on the location of damage, therefore, an intact oblique or first annular pulley can maintain normal excursion of the tendon.
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