4.5 Article

Development of overuse tendinopathy: A new descriptive model for the initiation of tendon damage during cyclic loading

Journal

JOURNAL OF ORTHOPAEDIC RESEARCH
Volume 36, Issue 1, Pages 467-476

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jor.23629

Keywords

tendinopathy; tendon fatigue damage; cyclic loading; collagen ultrastructure; CUE Model

Categories

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada [RGPIN-2014-04967]

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Tendinopathic tissue has long been characterized by changes to collagen microstructure. However, initial tendon damage from excessive mechanical loadinga hallmark of tendinopathy developmentcould occur at the nanoscale level of collagen fibrils. Indeed, it is on this scale that tenocytes interact directly with tendon matrix, and excessive collagen fibril damage not visible at the microscale could trigger a degenerative cascade. In this study, we explored whether initiation of tendon damage during cyclic loading occurs via a longitudinal compression-induced buckling mechanism of collagen fibrils leading to nanoscale kinkband development. Two groups of tendons were cyclically loaded to equivalent peak stresses. In each loading cycle, tendons in one group were unloaded to the zero displacement mark, while those in the other group were unloaded to a nominal level of tension, minimizing the potential for fibril buckling. Tendons that were unloaded to the zero displacement mark ruptured significantly sooner during cyclic loading (1,446 +/- 737 vs. 4,069 +/- 1,129 cycles), indicating that significant fatigue damage is accrued in the low stress, toe region of the load-deformation response. Ultrastructural analysis using scanning electron microscopy of tendons stopped after 1,000 cycles showed that maintaining a nominal tension slowed the accumulation of kinkbands, supporting a longitudinal compression-induced buckling mechanism as the basis for kinkband development. Based on our results, we present a new descriptive model for the initiation of tendon damage during cyclic loading. The so-called Compression of Unrecovered Elongation or CUE Model may provide useful insight into the development of tendinopathy. (c) 2017 Orthopaedic Research Society. Published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Orthop Res 36:467-476, 2018.

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