The effect of muscle loading on flexor tendon‐to‐bone healing in a canine model

Abstract
Previous tendon and ligament studies have demonstrated a role for mechanical loading in tissue homeostasis and healing. In uninjured musculoskeletal tissues, increased loading leads to an increase in mechanical properties, whereas decreased loading leads to a decrease in mechanical properties. The role of loading on healing tissues is less clear. We studied tendon‐to‐bone healing in a canine flexor tendon‐to‐bone injury and repair model. To examine the effect of muscle loading on tendon‐to‐bone healing, repaired tendons were either cut proximally (unloaded group) to remove all load from the distal phalanx repair site or left intact proximally (loaded group). All paws were casted postoperatively and subjected to daily passive motion rehabilitation. Specimens were tested to determine functional properties, biomechanical properties, repair‐site gapping, and bone mineral density. Loading across the repair site led to improved functional and biomechanical properties (e.g., stiffness for the loaded group was 8.2 ± 3.9 versus 5.1 ± 2.5 N/mm for the unloaded group). Loading did not affect bone mineral density or gapping. The formation of a gap between the healing tendon and bone correlated with failure properties. Using a clinically relevant model of flexor tendon injury and repair, we found that muscle loading was beneficial to healing. Complete removal of load by proximal transection resulted in tendon‐to‐bone repairs with less range of motion and lower biomechanical properties compared to repairs in which the muscle‐tendon‐bone unit was left intact. © 2008 Orthopaedic Research Society. Published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Orthop Res

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