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PURPOSE: To investigate the tibiofemoral contact mechanics and extent of medial meniscal extrusion (MME) between an isolated anatomic transtibial pull-through root repair (ATPR) and an ATPR combined with either transtibial or knotless anchor centralization in a porcine medial meniscal posterior root tear (MMPRT) model. METHODS: Porcine knee joints (N = 12) were used to test 5 meniscal conditions: (1) intact, (2) MMPRT, (3) ATPR, (4) ATPR with transtibial centralization (TTC), and (5) ATPR with 2 knotless anchor-based centralization (2AC). Contact area and peak contact pressure on the medial meniscus, as well as extrusion, were evaluated at 30°, 45°, 60°, and 90° of knee flexion under a 200-N compressive force. RESULTS: , P = .037). ATPR-TTC significantly reduced peak contact pressure compared with ATPR at 45° (4.97 MPa vs 5.60 MPa, P = .015) and 60° (5.20 MPa vs 5.99 MPa, P = .026), with similar values to those of ATPR-2AC across all angles. CONCLUSIONS: In a cadaveric porcine model evaluating time-zero biomechanics, an anatomic transtibial pull-through repair with TTC using 2 suture tapes reduced extrusion and improved contact mechanics when compared with an isolated repair or a repair combined with centralization using 2 knotless anchors. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: When there are concerns of MME after a MMPRT repair, the addition of a TTC suture may provide better biomechanical properties than an isolated repair or a repair combined with centralization using 2 knotless anchors.
Boksh et al. (Sat,) studied this question.