4.6 Article

Challenging the Perceptions of Human Tendon Allografts: Influence of Donor Age, Sex, Height, and Tendon on Biomechanical Properties

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SPORTS MEDICINE
Volume 51, Issue 3, Pages 768-778

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/03635465221143385

Keywords

musculoskeletal; graft; biomechanics of tendon; tissue mechanics; ACL; reconstruction

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This study investigated the mechanical properties of a range of human lower leg tendons and their relationship with donor age, sex, and height. The results showed significant differences in mechanical properties among different tendons, with relatively small effects of donor characteristics limited to specific tendons. The findings challenge the exclusion of donors aged >65 years in all tendon grafts, as age only negatively affected the properties of the Achilles tendon (maximum load).
Background: The use of allograft tendons has increased for primary and revision anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction, but allograft supply is currently limited to a narrow range of tendons and donors up to the age of 65 years. Expanding the range of donors and tendons could help offset an increasing clinical demand. Purpose: To investigate the effects of donor age, sex, height, and specific tendon on the mechanical properties of a range of human lower leg tendons. Study Design: Descriptive laboratory study. Methods: Nine tendons were retrieved from 39 fresh-frozen human cadaveric lower legs (35 donors [13 female, 22 male]; age, 49-99 years; height, 57-85 inches [145-216 cm]) including: Achilles tendon, tibialis posterior and anterior, fibularis longus and brevis, flexor and extensor hallucis longus, plantaris, and flexor digitorum longus. Tendons underwent tensile loading to failure measuring cross-sectional area (CSA), maximum load, strain at failure, ultimate tensile strength, and elastic modulus. Results from 332 tendons were analyzed using mixed-effects linear regression, accounting for donor age, sex, height, and weight. Results: Mechanical properties were significantly different among tendons and were substantially greater than the effects of donor characteristics. Significant effects of donor sex, age, and height were limited to specific tendons: Achilles tendon, tibialis posterior, and tibialis anterior. All other tendons were unaffected. The Achilles tendon was most influenced by donor variables: greater CSA in men (beta = 15.45 mm(2); Sidak adjusted P < .0001), decreased maximum load with each year of increased age (beta = -17.20 N per year; adjusted P = .0253), and increased CSA (beta = 1.92 mm(2) per inch; adjusted P < .0001) and maximum load (beta = 86.40 N per inch; adjusted P < .0001) with each inch of increased height. Conclusion: Mechanical properties vary significantly across different human tendons. The effects of donor age, sex, and height are relatively small, are limited to specific tendons, and affect different tendons uniquely. The findings indicate that age negatively affected only the Achilles tendon (maximum load) and challenge the exclusion of donors aged >65 years across all tendon grafts.

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