Achilles Tendon Tissue Turnover Before and Immediately After an Acute Rupture.

Am J Sports Med

Sports Orthopedic Research Center-Copenhagen, Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Hvidovre Hospital, University of Copenhagen, Hvidovre, Denmark.

Published: July 2023

Background: An Achilles tendon rupture (ATR) is a frequent injury and results in the activation of tendon cells and collagen expression, but it is unknown to what extent turnover of the tendon matrix is altered before or after a rupture.

Purpose/hypothesis: The purpose of this study was to characterize tendon tissue turnover before and immediately after an acute rupture in patients. It was hypothesized that a rupture would result in pronounced collagen synthesis in the early phase (first 2 weeks) after the injury.

Study Design: Cross-sectional study; Level of evidence, 3.

Methods: The study included patients (N = 18) eligible for surgery after an ATR. At the time of inclusion, the patients ingested deuterium oxide (HO) orally, and on the day of surgery (within 14 days of the injury), they received a 3-hour flood-primed infusion of an N-proline tracer. During surgery, the patients had 1 biopsy specimen taken from the ruptured part of the Achilles tendon and 1 that was 3 to 5 cm proximal to the rupture as a control. The biopsy specimens were analyzed for carbon-14 (C) levels in the tissue to calculate long-term turnover (years), incorporation of H-alanine (from HO) into the tissue to calculate the fractional synthesis rate (FSR) of proteins in the short term (days), and incorporation of N-proline into the tissue to calculate the acute FSR (hours).

Results: Both the rupture and the control samples showed consistently lower levels of C compared with the predicted level of C in a healthy tendon, which indicated increased tendon turnover in a fraction (48% newly synthesized) of the Achilles tendon already for a prolonged period before the rupture. Over the first days after the rupture, the synthesis rate for collagen was relatively constant, and the average synthesis rate on the day of surgery (2-14 days after the rupture) was 0.025% per hour, irrespective of the length of time after a rupture and the site of sampling (rupture vs control). No differences were found in the FSR between the rupture and control samples in the days after the rupture.

Conclusion: Higher than normal tissue turnover in the Achilles tendon before a rupture indicated that changes in the tendon tissue preceded the injury. In addition, we observed no increase in tendon collagen tissue turnover in the first 2 weeks after an ATR. This favors the view that an increase in the formation of new tendon collagen is not an immediate phenomenon during the regeneration of ruptured tendons in patients.

Registration: NCT03931486 (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier).

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/03635465231177890DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

achilles tendon
20
tissue turnover
16
rupture control
16
rupture
13
tendon tissue
12
tendon
12
tissue calculate
12
synthesis rate
12
tissue
8
turnover acute
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!