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Tendon midsubstance trauma as a means for the development of translatable chronic rotator cuff degeneration in an ovine model

Authors :
Devin von Stade
Jeremiah T. Easley
Lyndah Chow
Ted Schlegel
Steven W. Dow
James Weldon Johnson
Kirk C. McGilvray
Daniel P. Regan
Tony Romeo
Source :
Ann Transl Med
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
AME Publishing Company, 2021.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Chronic degeneration of rotator cuff tendons is a major contributing factor to the unacceptably high prevalence of rotator cuff repair surgery failures. The etiology of chronic rotator cuff degeneration is not well understood, and current therapies are not effective, necessitating preclinical research to fill this knowledge gap. Unfortunately, current large animal models rely on enthesis disruption as a means of model generation, which is not representative of human patients with chronic rotator cuff degeneration prior to full-thickness tears. Following, the goal of this study was to develop and characterize a translational large-animal model of chronic rotator cuff degeneration without enthesis release. METHODS: A midsubstance damage model [i.e., “combed fenestration” (CF)] in adult sheep was generated by creating 16 longitudinal cuts within the top third of the infraspinatus tendon thickness. Tendon integrity was characterized through exhaustive non-destructive biomechanical stress relaxation testing [peak stress, peak load, percent relaxation, and cross-sectional area (CSA)], followed by histopathological degeneration scoring and analysis (Bonar score), histomorphological analysis of collagen organization and fatty atrophy (percent adipose area), and gene expression analyses. RESULTS: The CF model tendons exhibited significantly decreased mechanical properties as evidenced by decreased peak stress (P

Details

ISSN :
23055847 and 23055839
Volume :
9
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Annals of Translational Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....516c2230d82e15a37f74db12016907ed