4.5 Article

Effects of focused ultrasound and dry needling on tendon mechanical properties

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOMECHANICS
Volume 132, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jbiomech.2021.110934

Keywords

Mechanical properties; Tendon; Mechanical testing; Ultrasound; Rat

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health -National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering [R21EB027886]
  2. NSF Graduate Research Fellowship (Smallcomb) [DGE1255832]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study evaluated the mechanical effects of dry needling (DN) and focused ultrasound (fUS) on tendons. The results showed that fUS preserved the mechanical properties of tendons better than DN, with fUS-1 performing the best. Further research on the mechanical and healing effects of fUS could help evaluate its potential as a non-invasive treatment for tendon injuries.
Tendon injuries are extremely common, resulting in mechanically weaker tendons that could lead to tendon rupture. Dry needling (DN) is widely used to manage pain and function after injury. However, DN is invasive and high inter-practitioner variability has led to mixed success rates. Focused ultrasound (fUS) is a non-invasive medical technology that directs ultrasound energy into a well-defined focal volume. fUS can induce thermal ablation or mechanical fractionation, with bioeffect type controlled through ultrasound parameters. Tendons must withstand high physiological loads, thus treatments maintaining tendon mechanical properties while promoting healing are needed. Our objective was to evaluate mechanical effects of DN and 3 fUS parameter sets, chosen to prioritize mechanical fractionation, on Achilles and supraspinatus tendons. Ex vivo rat Achilles and supraspinatus tendons (50 each) were divided into sham, DN, fUS-1, fUS-2, and fUS-3 (n = 10/group). Following treatment, tendons were mechanically tested. Elastic modulus of supraspinatus tendons treated with DN (126.64 +/- 28.1 MPa) was lower than sham (153.02 +/- 29.3 MPa; p = 0.0280). Stiffness and percent relaxation of tendons treated with DN (Achilles: 114.40 +/- 31.6 N/mm; 49.10 +/- 6.1%; supraspinatus: 109.53 +/- 30.8 N/mm; 50.17 +/- 7.6%) were lower (all p < 0.0334) than sham (Achilles: 141.34 +/- 20.9 N/mm; 60.30 +/- 7.7%; supraspinatus: 135.14 +/- 30.2 N/mm; 60.85 +/- 15.4%). Modulus of Achilles and supraspinatus tendons treated with fUS-1 (159.88 +/- 25.7 MPa; 150.12 +/- 22.0 MPa, respectively) were similar to sham (156.35 +/- 23.0 MPa; 153.02 +/- 29.3 MPa, respectively). These results suggest that fUS preserves mechanical properties better than DN, with fUS-1 performing better than fUS-2 and fUS-3. fUS should be studied further to fully understand its mechanical and healing effects to help evaluate fUS as an alternative, non-invasive treatment for tendon injuries.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available