AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how different loading levels (full, reduced, minimal) during Achilles tendon healing affect the composition and organization of elastin and collagens in healing tendons.* -
  • Histological analysis revealed that minimal loading increased collagen and elastin staining intensity, but resulted in thinner tendons with a disorganized matrix, fewer aligned cells, and a higher number of blood vessels due to reduced angiogenesis.* -
  • Despite improvements in tissue integrity by 12 weeks post-injury, the healing tendons did not fully regain the structural integrity of intact tendons even after 20 weeks, highlighting the importance of load in tendon healing processes.*

Article Abstract

Tendon healing involves mechanosensitive cells that adapt to mechanical stimuli through mechanotransduction, resulting in increased tissue strength. However, detailed insights into this process in response to different loads remain limited. We aimed to investigate how different loading regimes impact the spatial composition of elastin and collagens during Achilles tendon healing. Histological analysis was conducted on healing rat Achilles tendons exposed to (1) full loading, (2) reduced loading, or (3) minimal loading. Histological analysis included Hematoxylin & Eosin and immunohistochemical staining targeting elastin, Collagen 1, Collagen 3, and CD31. Our results showed that the impact of mechanical stimuli on healing tendons varied with the degree of loading. Unexpectedly, minimal loading led to higher staining intensity for collagens and elastin. However, tendons exposed to minimal loading appeared thinner and exhibited a less organized matrix structure, with fewer, less aligned, and more rounded cells. Additionally, our findings indicated an inverse correlation between angiogenesis and load level, with more blood vessels in tendons subjected to less loading. Tissue integrity improved by 12 weeks post-injury, but the healing process continued and did not regain the structure seen in intact tendons even after 20 weeks. This study reveals a load-dependent effect on matrix alignment, cell density, and cell alignment.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11461875PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-74783-wDOI Listing

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