SOFT-TISSUE FLAWS ARE ASSOCIATED WITH THE MATERIAL PROPERTIES OF THE HEALING RABBIT MEDIAL COLLATERAL LIGAMENT

Citation
N. Shrive et al., SOFT-TISSUE FLAWS ARE ASSOCIATED WITH THE MATERIAL PROPERTIES OF THE HEALING RABBIT MEDIAL COLLATERAL LIGAMENT, Journal of orthopaedic research, 13(6), 1995, pp. 923-929
Citations number
22
Categorie Soggetti
Orthopedics
ISSN journal
07360266
Volume
13
Issue
6
Year of publication
1995
Pages
923 - 929
Database
ISI
SICI code
0736-0266(1995)13:6<923:SFAAWT>2.0.ZU;2-G
Abstract
This study evaluated microscopic flaws in the healing rabbit medial co llateral ligament and their significance in terms of the material prop erties of this ligament during healing. A gap injury was created in th e midsubstance of the medial collateral ligament in the right hindlimb of 15 skeletally mature (12 months old) New Zealand White rabbits. At postoperative intervals of 3, 6, or 14 weeks, histomorphometric analy sis of the flaws was carried out in subgroups of animals. The medial c ollateral ligaments from four of the left hindlimbs (randomly selected ) were used as uninjured contralateral controls. In one histologic sec tion of each area of scar tissue and the analogous area in the control s, specified tissue flaws (blood vessels, fat cells, hypercellular are as, loose matrix, disorganized matrix, or a combination of these) were measured by four independent and blinded observers. The results showe d that the mean total area of the flaws, as a percentage of the total section, and the mean area of the largest flaw decreased with healing time in each healing group but did not achieve control values by 14 we eks. Because it was not possible to test the healing medial collateral ligaments mechanically prior to measurement of the flaws (due to the destructive nature of failure testing), the data on the flaws were com pared with the material strength and stiffness of a separate series of similarly injured and mechanically tested medial collateral ligaments (data published previously). A maximum likelihood statistical analysi s showed a very strong functional association between the mean area of the largest flaw and the stress at failure (p < 0.004) and between th e mean flaw area as a percentage of the total section area and the ela stic modulus (p < 0.001). This study therefore demonstrates that it is possible to quantify material flaws in scar tissue in rabbit medial c ollateral ligaments, that these flaws become smaller with healing time as the scar remodels, and that flaws are functionally associated with the material properties of the ligament in this model (larger flaws w ith less tensile strength and more flaws with less stiffness).