BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders (Dec 2020)

Navigation-assisted anchor insertion in shoulder arthroscopy: a validity study

  • Kyunghwa Jung,
  • Hyojune Kim,
  • Erica Kholinne,
  • Dongjun Park,
  • Hyunseok Choi,
  • Seongpung Lee,
  • Myung-Jin Shin,
  • Dong-Min Kim,
  • Jaesung Hong,
  • Kyoung Hwan Koh,
  • In-Ho Jeon

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12891-020-03808-y
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract Background This study aimed to compare conventional and navigation-assisted arthroscopic rotator cuff repair in terms of anchor screw insertion. Methods The surgical performance of five operators while using the conventional and proposed navigation-assisted systems in a phantom surgical model and cadaveric shoulders were compared. The participating operators were divided into two groups, the expert group (n = 3) and the novice group (n = 2). In the phantom model, the experimental tasks included anchor insertion in the rotator cuff footprint and sutures retrieval. A motion analysis camera system was used to track the surgeons’ hand movements. The surgical performance metric included the total path length, number of movements, and surgical duration. In cadaveric experiments, the repeatability and reproducibility of the anchor insertion angle were compared among the three experts, and the feasibility of the navigation-assisted anchor insertion was validated. Results No significant differences in the total path length, number of movements, and time taken were found between the conventional and proposed systems in the phantom model. In cadaveric experiments, however, the clustering of the anchor insertion angle indicated that the proposed system enabled both novice and expert operators to reproducibly insert the anchor with an angle close to the predetermined target angle, resulting in an angle error of < 2° (P = 0.0002). Conclusion The proposed navigation-assisted system improved the surgical performance from a novice level to an expert level. All the experts achieved high repeatability and reproducibility for anchor insertion. The navigation-assisted system may help surgeons, including those who are inexperienced, easily familiarize themselves to of suture anchors insertion in the right direction by providing better guidance for anchor orientation. Level of evidence A retrospective study (level 2).

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