4.6 Article

Characterization of scar tissue biomechanics during adult murine flexor tendon healing

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jmbbm.2022.105192

Keywords

Biomechanics; Tendon injury; Regenerative healing; Scar tissue; Function

Funding

  1. NIH/NIAMS [P30AR069655]

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This study focuses on characterizing the mechanical properties of scar tissue and comparing them with the properties of the composite healing tissues in flexor digitorum longus tendons. The method used in the study identifies significant differences between the scar tissue and the composite tissues, suggesting that testing composite healing tendons without isolating the scar tissue overestimates the material properties of the scar itself. The study also validates the experimental findings with the help of inverse finite element analysis.
Tendon injuries are very common and result in significant impairments in mobility and quality of life. During healing, tendons produce a scar at the injury site, characterized by abundant and disorganized extracellular matrix and by permanent deficits in mechanical integrity compared to healthy tendon. Although a significant amount of work has been done to understand the healing process of tendons and to develop potential therapeutics for tendon regeneration, there is still a significant gap in terms of assessing the direct effects of therapeutics on the functional and material quality specifically of the scar tissue, and thus, on the overall tendon healing process. In this study, we focused on characterizing the mechanical properties of only the scar tissue in flexor digitorum longus (FDL) tendons during the proliferative and early remodeling healing phases and comparing these properties with the mechanical properties of the composite healing tissue. Our method was sensitive enough to identify significant differences in structural and material properties between the scar and tendon-scar composite tissues. To account for possible inaccuracies due to the small aspect ratio of scar tissue, we also applied inverse finite element analysis (iFEA) to compute mechanical properties based on simulated tests with accurate specimen geometries and boundary conditions. We found that the scar tissue linear tangent moduli calculated from iFEA were not significantly different from those calculated experimentally at all healing timepoints, validating our experimental findings, and suggesting the assumptions in our experimental calculations were accurate. Taken together, this study first demonstrates that due to the presence of uninjured stubs, testing composite healing tendons without isolating the scar tissue overestimates the material properties of the scar itself. Second, our scar isolation method promises to enable more direct assessment of how different treatment regimens (e.g., cellular ablation, biomechanical and/or biochemical stimuli, tissue engineered scaffolds) affect scar tissue function and material quality in multiple different types of tendons.

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