Abstract

The supraspinatus tendon plays a crucial role in shoulder abduction, making it one of the common structures affected by injury. Clinically, crescent-shaped tears are the most commonly seen tear shape. By developing six specimen-specific, three-dimensional, supraspinatus-infraspinatus finite element model with heterogeneous material properties, this study aimed to examine the changes in tissue deformation (maximum principal strain) of the supraspinatus tendon due to specimen-specific material properties and rotator cuff tear size. FE models with small- and medium-sized full-thickness crescent-shaped tears were subjected to loads seen during activities of daily living and physiotherapy. Six fresh-frozen cadaveric shoulders were dissected to mechanically test the supraspinatus tendon and develop and validate FE models that can be used to assess changes in strain due to small (< 1cm, equivalent to 20-30% of the tendon width) and medium-sized (1-3cm, equivalent to 40-50% of the tendon width) tears that are located in the middle and posterior regions of the supraspinatus tendon. FE predictions of maximum principal strain at the tear tips were examined to determine whether failure strain was reached during activities of daily living (drinking and brushing teeth) and physiotherapy exercises (prone abduction and external rotation at 90° abduction). No significant differences were observed between the middle and posterior tear failure loads for small- and medium-sized tears. For prone abduction, there was a potential risk for tear progression (exceeded failure strain) for medium-sized tears in the supraspinatus tendon's middle and posterior regions. For external rotation at 90° abduction, one model with a middle tear and two with posterior tears experienced failure. For all daily activity loads, the strain never exceeded the failure strain. Our three-dimensional supraspinatus-infraspinatus FE model shows that small tears appear unlikely to progress based on the regional strain response; however, medium-sized tears are at higher risk during more strenuous physiotherapy exercises. Furthermore, differences in patient-specific tendon material properties are important in determining whether the tear will progress. Therefore, patient-specific management plans based on tear size may be beneficial to improve clinical outcomes.

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