• ABSTRACT
    • The role of biological augmentation in arthroscopic rotator cuff repair surgery has increased over the years. It has shown favorable healing rates and functional outcomes. Patch augmentation is commonly applied in repairs of massively retracted cuff tears, full-thickness tears, revision repair, or open cuff surgery. There is a paucity of literature on the use of patch augmentation when dealing with a chronic degenerate tendon associated with small-sized cuff tears. In recent years, the resorbable bioinductive bovine collagen implant has gained popularity for its application in partial-thickness tears via an isolated bioinductive repair fashion, without traditional rotator cuff repair. These bioinductive implants, albeit promising in their biological properties for tendon repair, lack structural strength and do not confer similar biomechanical advantages as human dermal allograft. We share our surgical technique for an arthroscopic patch augmentation involving human dermal allograft, using a single-lateral row surgical fixation, to address a degenerate cuff tendon with small-sized rotator cuff tear. We believe that our use of a human dermal patch augmentation conferred increased biomechanical advantage and reduced costs while delivering favorable outcomes for patients in our value-driven care.