A Prospective Study Comparing Suture Anchor and Soft Tissue Pectoralis Major Tendon Techniques for Biceps Tenodesis
Bicep Tendinitis, Biceps; Tenosynovitis, Biceps Tendon Disorder
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Bicep Tendinitis focused on measuring Biceps Tendinitis, Subpectoral biceps tenodesis, Biceps tendon disorder
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Age 18 - 100 years
- Able to provide written informed consent
- Has: (a) partial- or full-thickness rotator cuff tear verified by preoperative magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and arthroscopy; (b) concomitant biceps lesions (LHBT partial tear>50%, SLAP type II lesion, pulley lesion, or subluxation/dislocation of LHBT) that were diagnosed arthroscopically with concomitant symptoms; and (c) arthroscopic rotator cuff repair.
Exclusion Criteria:
- Any medical illness that adversely impacts the patient's ability to complete the study procedures
- Isolated glenohumeral pathological conditions
- Any prior surgery on the same shoulder
- Complete rupture of the LHBT assessed by MRI or at time of procedure
- Incomplete repair of the rotator cuff
Sites / Locations
- Saint Louis University
- SSM Health - Saint Louis University Hospital
- SSM Health - St. Mary's Hospital
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Active Comparator
Active Comparator
Suture Anchor Technique (SA)
Pectoralis Major Technique (PMT)
If randomized to this group, the patient will receive an open subpectoral long head of biceps tenodesis technique whereby the long head of biceps is re-attached to the humerus using an FDA-approved suture anchor (SA) device for the suture anchor technique. The device to be used will be the Mitek Super Quick Anchor.
If randomized to this group, the patient will receive an open subpectoral long head of biceps tenodesis technique whereby the long head of biceps is re-attached by suturing the biceps tendon into the pectoralis major tendon.