KATOR received U.S. Patent No. 10,136,883, “Method of Anchoring a Suture,” addressing a novel combination of a knotless suture anchor used with a transosseous suture method.
This platform technology is designed to support stronger surgical repair constructs than currently marketed suture anchors, enabling surgeons to achieve stronger tissue-to-bone repairs with fewer suture anchors. Published results of biomechanical testing have demonstrated the superior performance of KATOR’s 2-anchor knotless transosseous repair vs. a 4-anchor, transosseous equivalent.
KATOR is incubated and operated by Surgical Frontiers.
Source: Surgical Frontiers
KATOR received U.S. Patent No. 10,136,883, “Method of Anchoring a Suture,” addressing a novel combination of a knotless suture anchor used with a transosseous suture method.
This platform technology is designed to support stronger surgical repair constructs than currently marketed suture anchors, enabling surgeons to achieve...
KATOR received U.S. Patent No. 10,136,883, “Method of Anchoring a Suture,” addressing a novel combination of a knotless suture anchor used with a transosseous suture method.
This platform technology is designed to support stronger surgical repair constructs than currently marketed suture anchors, enabling surgeons to achieve stronger tissue-to-bone repairs with fewer suture anchors. Published results of biomechanical testing have demonstrated the superior performance of KATOR’s 2-anchor knotless transosseous repair vs. a 4-anchor, transosseous equivalent.
KATOR is incubated and operated by Surgical Frontiers.
Source: Surgical Frontiers
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JV
Julie Vetalice is ORTHOWORLD's Editorial Assistant. She has covered the orthopedic industry for over 20 years, having joined the company in 1999.