Early active motion and weightbearing after cross-stitch Achilles tendon repair

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Deutscher übersetzter Titel:Fruehe aktive Bewegung und Gewichtsbelastung nach Achillessehnennaht mit Ueberkreuzstichen
Autor:Aoki, M.; Ogiwara, N.; Ohta, T.; Nabeta, Y.
Erschienen in:The American journal of sports medicine
Veröffentlicht:26 (1998), 6, S. 794-800, Lit.
Format: Literatur (SPOLIT)
Publikationstyp: Zeitschriftenartikel
Medienart: Gedruckte Ressource
Sprache:Englisch
ISSN:0363-5465, 1552-3365
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Erfassungsnummer:PU199901306369
Quelle:BISp

Abstract des Autors

Twenty-two closed Achilles tendon ruptures caused by sports injuries in 22 patients (average age, 37.6 years) were repaired with Kirschmayer core suture and cross-stitch epitenon suture, and early active ankle motion with weightbearing was implemented after surgery. This study was undertaken to evaluate the effectiveness of the repair technique and rehabilitation protocol by assessing clinical results and magnetic resonance imaging findings. The follow-up period averaged 24.6 months. Twenty of the tendons (91%) healed without rerupture at 23 and 56 days, respectively. Active ankle extension reached from the minus range to 0ø in an average of 9.7 days, and ankle motion recovered to normal in an average of 6.0 weeks. Full weightbearing without heel raising became possible in an average of 16.4 days, and heel raising with both legs became possible in an average of 7.3 weeks. The patients returned to full sports activity in 13.1 weeks. The interval until the area of high-intensity signal at the tendon repair site on T2-weighted magnetic resonance imaging scans became intermediate-intensity signal averaged 6.9 weeks, and the tendon repair site became low-intensity signal in an average of 12.6 weeks, demonstrating excellent tendon healing. Treatment employing Kirschmayer core suture and cross-stitch epitenon suture may help athletes return to sports activity in a shorter period than that allowed by previous methods of repair for Achilles tendon ruptures. Verf.-Referat