4.5 Article

Shear wave tensiometry tracks reductions in collateral ligament tension due to incremental releases

Journal

JOURNAL OF ORTHOPAEDIC RESEARCH
Volume 41, Issue 3, Pages 524-533

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jor.25400

Keywords

intraoperative sensor; ligament release; ligament tensiometry; soft tissue balancing; total knee replacement

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This study aimed to investigate the capability of shear wave tensiometry in detecting changes in ligament tension following incremental releases. The results showed that shear wave tensiometry can measure the tension reduction in released structures objectively. This has clinical significance in enhancing surgical precision during soft tissue balancing in total knee arthroplasty.
Surgeons routinely perform incremental releases on overly tight ligaments during total knee arthroplasty (TKA) to reduce ligament tension and achieve their desired implant alignment. However, current methods to assess whether the surgeon achieved their desired reduction in the tension of a released ligament are subjective and/or do not provide a quantitative metric of tension in an individual ligament. Accordingly, the purpose of this study was to determine whether shear wave tensiometry, a novel method to assess tension in individual ligaments based on the speed of shear wave propagation, can detect changes in ligament tension following incremental releases. In seven medial and eight lateral collateral porcine ligaments (MCL and LCL, respectively), we measured shear wave speeds and ligament tensions before and after incremental releases consisting of punctures with an 18-gauge needle. We found that shear wave speed squared decreased linearly with decreasing tension in both the MCL (average coefficient of determination (R-avg(2)) = 0.76) and LCL (R-avg(2) = 0.94). We determined that errors in predicting tension following incremental releases were 26.2 and 14.2 N in the MCL and LCL, respectively, using ligament-specific calibrations. These results suggest shear wave tensiometry is a promising method to objectively measure the tension reduction in released structures. Clinical Significance: Direct, objective measurements of the tension changes in individual ligaments following release could enhance surgical precision during soft tissue balancing in total knee arthroplasty. Thus, shear wave tensiometry could help surgeons reduce the risk of poor outcomes associated with overly tight ligaments, including residual knee pain and stiffness.

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