Abstract

The biomechanical effects of constant mechanical load on tendon repair in vitro were determined for rabbit flexor tendons. Tendons were removed from Zone II, transected, reapproximated with four simple sutures, and cultured in standard medium. Tendons from the right forelimbs were loaded with 3.1-g weights; tendons from the contralateral forelimbs served as unloaded tendons. Tenorrhaphies were disrupted at zero, one, three, and six weeks postsuturing by fixed-speed tensiometry. True maximum stress (strength), normalized energy absorbed, and tangent modulus steadily increased over time, becoming significantly greater than unincubated controls in the loaded and unloaded groups at six weeks. True strain at maximum stress increased with duration for unloaded tendons; after six weeks it was significantly greater than unincubated control tendons. This study demonstrates a method for quantifying the biomechanics of tendon after intrinsic tendon segment healing and presents the first biomechanical evaluation of constant tension applied across the laceration site during an in vitro healing phase.

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