Quiste meniscal posterior a la sutura meniscal con monofilamento de polipropileno

Keywords: Meniscal Cyst, Suture, Polypropylene Monofilament

Abstract

Introduction: the function of the meniscal tissue is fundamental in the transmission and distribution of knee loads. In cases of meniscal injury, suturing is the surgical treatment of choice, and different materials can be used to perform it. The aim of the work is to analyze the appearance of symptomatic meniscal cysts with the use of non-absorbable polypropylene monofilament suture in a group of patients with bucket handle injuries and to evaluate the suture material as a cause of the cyst.

Materials and methods: a retrospective study was carried out on a group of patients with bucket-handle injuries sutured with non-absorbable polypropylene monofilament (MP) material and high-strength ultra-high molecular weight UHMWPE polyethylene (SAR) suture and the presence of a symptomatic meniscal cyst as a complication was analyzed. The inclusion criteria for this study were patients with bucket-handle injuries in whom meniscal suture was performed with combined techniques with non-resorbable material. Patients with injuries other than a bucket-handle pattern or who underwent all-in meniscal suturing only were excluded.

Results: a total of twenty-five patients, fifteen males and ten females. The average age of the evaluated group was 27.8 years. 72% were sutured with high resistance suture (SAR) while 28% were sutured with polypropylene monofilament (MP). 92% of the injuries occurred in the medial meniscus. Three patients were observed with symptomatic meniscal cysts associated with the MP suture, which were treated surgically with good outcomes.

Conclusion: we identified in our series that the appearance of symptomatic cysts is closely related to the use of polypropylene monofilament (MP). We consider the use of high-strength non-absorbable threads (ultra-high molecular weight polyethylene UHMWPE) as the first option to perform meniscal sutures due to the low complication rate and good results.

Author Biography

Juan Francisco Villalba

Título de especialista: Ortopedia y Traumatología otorgado por la Asociación Argentina de Ortopedia y Traumatología (AAOT).

Fellow de especialización en rodilla: Sector Artroscopia y Prótesis de Rodilla Hospital Italiano de Bs As, 2013-2014.

Cirujano Artroscopista: Reconocido por la Asociación Argentina de Artroscopia. 2019

Médico con residencia completa de 4 años del Servicio de Ortopedia y Traumatología, Hospital R. Rossi, La Plata, Bs. As. Junio 2008 a Mayo 2012.

Jefe de residentes 2012-2013 del Servicio de Ortopedia y Traumatología, Hospital R. Rossi, La Plata, Bs. As.

Médico Ortopedia y Traumatología Clínica del Deporte La Plata, período Junio 2014 a Agosto 2017.

Médico Instructor de Residentes de Ortopedia y Traumatología. Hospital R. Rossi, La Plata, Bs. As. De Enero a Octubre de 2017.

Médico de Staff de Traumatología del Comahue, Neuquén. Noviembre 2017 a la actualidad. Sector Artroscopia

Médico Instructor de Residentes de Ortopedia y Traumatología. Traumatología del Comahue, Neuquén, Septiembre  2019 a la actualidad.

Published
2024-04-30
How to Cite
[1]
Villalba, J.F., Olguin, M. del P., Bennett, C. and Gutiérrez, D. 2024. Quiste meniscal posterior a la sutura meniscal con monofilamento de polipropileno. Revista Artroscopia. 31, 01 (Apr. 2024).