Tendinopathy and tendon material response to load: What we can learn from small animal studies

Williamson, Patrick M., Benjamin R. Freedman, Nicholas Kwok, Indeevar Beeram, Jan Pennings, Jeremy Johnson, Daron Hamparian, et al. 2021. “Tendinopathy and Tendon Material Response to Load: What We Can Learn from Small Animal Studies”. Acta Biomaterialia 134: 43-56.

Abstract

Tendinopathy is a debilitating disease that causes as much as 30% of all musculoskeletal consultations. Existing treatments for tendinopathy have variable efficacy, possibly due to incomplete characterization of the underlying pathophysiology. Mechanical load can have both beneficial and detrimental effects on tendon, as the overall tendon response depends on the degree, frequency, timing, and magnitude of the load. The clinical continuum model of tendinopathy offers insight into the late stages of tendinopathy, but it does not capture the subclinical tendinopathic changes that begin before pain or loss of function. Small animal models that use high tendon loading to mimic human tendinopathy may be able to fill this knowledge gap. The goal of this review is to summarize the insights from in-vivo animal studies of mechanically-induced tendinopathy and higher loading regimens into the mechanical, microstructural, and biological features that help characterize the continuum between normal tendon and tendinopathy.

Last updated on 01/02/2024