Murine patellar tendon biomechanical properties and regional strain patterns during natural tendon-to-bone healing after acute injury

J Biomech. 2014 Jun 27;47(9):2035-42. doi: 10.1016/j.jbiomech.2013.10.029. Epub 2013 Oct 22.

Abstract

Tendon-to-bone healing following acute injury is generally poor and often fails to restore normal tendon biomechanical properties. In recent years, the murine patellar tendon (PT) has become an important model system for studying tendon healing and repair due to its genetic tractability and accessible location within the knee. However, the mechanical properties of native murine PT, specifically the regional differences in tissue strains during loading, and the biomechanical outcomes of natural PT-to-bone healing have not been well characterized. Thus, in this study, we analyzed the global biomechanical properties and regional strain patterns of both normal and naturally healing murine PT at three time points (2, 5, and 8 weeks) following acute surgical rupture of the tibial enthesis. Normal murine PT exhibited distinct regional variations in tissue strain, with the insertion region experiencing approximately 2.5 times greater strain than the midsubstance at failure (10.80±2.52% vs. 4.11±1.40%; mean±SEM). Injured tendons showed reduced structural (ultimate load and linear stiffness) and material (ultimate stress and linear modulus) properties compared to both normal and contralateral sham-operated tendons at all healing time points. Injured tendons also displayed increased local strain in the insertion region compared to contralateral shams at both physiologic and failure load levels. 93.3% of injured tendons failed at the tibial insertion, compared to only 60% and 66.7% of normal and sham tendons, respectively. These results indicate that 8 weeks of natural tendon-to-bone healing does not restore normal biomechanical function to the murine PT following injury.

Keywords: Insertion site; Patellar tendon; Regional strain; Tendon-to-bone healing.

Publication types

  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Biomechanical Phenomena
  • Male
  • Mice
  • Patellar Ligament / injuries
  • Patellar Ligament / physiology
  • Patellar Ligament / physiopathology*
  • Rupture
  • Tibia / injuries
  • Tibia / physiology
  • Tibia / physiopathology*
  • Wound Healing / physiology