4.2 Article

Human TendoneDerived Collagen Hydrogel Significantly Improves Biomechanical Properties of the Tendon-Bone Interface in a Chronic Rotator Cuff Injury Model

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出版社

W B SAUNDERS CO-ELSEVIER INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhsa.2018.11.021

关键词

Collagen gel; rotator cuff; tendon-bone interface; tissue engineering

资金

  1. American Foundation for Surgery of the Hand Basic Science Grant
  2. Merit Review Award from the United States Department of Veterans Affairs Rehabilitation Research and Development Service [1I01RX001458-01A2]

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Purpose Poor healing of the tendon-bone interface (TBI) after rotator cuff (RTC) tears leads to high rates of recurrent tear following repair. Previously, we demonstrated that an injectable, thermoresponsive, type I collagen-rich, decellularized human tendon-derived hydrogel (tHG) improved healing in an acute rat Achilles tendon injury model. The purpose of this study was to investigate whether tHG enhances the biomechanical properties of the regenerated TBI in a rat model of chronic RTC injury and repair. Methods Tendon hydrogel was prepared from chemically decellularized human cadaveric flexor tendons. Eight weeks after bilateral resection of supraspinatus tendons, repair of both shoulders was performed. One shoulder was treated with a transosseous suture (control group) and the other was treated with a transosseous suture plus tHG injection at the repair site (tHG group). Eight weeks after repair, the TBIs were evaluated biomechanically, histologically, and via micro-computed tomography (CT). Results Biomechanical testing revealed a larger load to failure, higher stiffness, higher energy to failure, larger strain at failure, and higher toughness in the tHG group versus control. The area of new cartilage formation was significantly larger in the tHG group. Micro-CT revealed no significant difference between groups in bone morphometry at the supraspinatus tendon insertion, although the tHG group was superior to the control. Conclusions Injection of tHG at the RTC repair site enhanced biomechanical properties and increased fibrocartilage formation at the TBI in a chronic injury model. (Copyright (C) 2019 by the American Society for Surgery of the Hand. All rights reserved.)

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