Long Head of the Biceps Tendon Tenodesis
Subpectoral (Distal) Technique
Introduction
Procedure
Patient History
Patient Examination
Imaging
Treatment Options
Surgical Anatomy
Surgical Indications
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Long Head of the Biceps Tendon Tenodesis: Subpectoral (Distal) Technique
Chapter 49
Peter N. Chalmers, Gregory L. Cvetanovich, and Anthony A. Romeo
Pathology of the long head of the biceps tendon (LHBT), in particular biceps tendonitis, is a common cause of anterior shoulder pain among overhead athletes and manual laborers. Diagnosis relies on history and physical examination, supplemented with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in questionable cases. Nonoperative treatment with supervised physiotherapy, nonsteroidal antiinflammatories, and corticosteroid injections is successful in most cases. In refractory cases, open subpectoral biceps tenodesis (OBT) has excellent outcomes and infrequent complications. This procedure is a crucial element of the surgical armamentarium of the sports and shoulder surgeon.
Open subpectoral biceps tenodesis can be performed after arthroscopic tenotomy and any other arthroscopic procedures such as rotator cuff repair. Using a cosmetic axillary incision and an approach between the pectoralis and short head of the biceps, the anterior humerus can be exposed and the tenotomized long head retrieved and prepared with looped running nonabsorbable suture. An anterior humeral tunnel can then be drilled and the tendon tensioned, dunked into the tunnel, and fixated with an interference screw to rapidly and safely restore the anatomic length-tension of the long head of the biceps muscle while removing the entirety of the inflammed proximal tendon.