Cb. Frank et al., INJURY LOCATION AFFECTS LIGAMENT HEALING - A MORPHOLOGIC AND MECHANICAL STUDY OF THE HEALING RABBIT MEDIAL COLLATERAL LIGAMENT, Acta orthopaedica Scandinavica, 66(5), 1995, pp. 455-462
Based on the heterogeneity of the rabbit medial collateral ligament (M
CL) along its length, we tested the hypothesis that injury location wo
uld affect its healing response. The right MCL of 80 skeletally mature
New Zealand white rabbits was sectioned adjacent to bane at the femor
al end (40 rabbits) or the tibial end (40 rabbits) and reapposed with
sutures. Animals were killed after 3, 6, 14, or 40 weeks of healing to
examine wounds histologically (2 rabbits per healing interval) and me
chanically (8 rabbits per healing interval). Results of the mechanical
tests were compared to midsubstance MCL repairs (24 rabbits) and to u
ninjured normal MCLs (20 rabbits). The morphology of the near-insertio
n repairs was characterized by abnormal callus-like formation and patc
hy bone resorption, particularly at the tibial insertion. Mechanically
, insertional injuries remodeled towards normal MCL low-load, viscoela
stic and failure properties more slowly than midsubstance injuries at
the early healing intervals. After 40 weeks of healing, few injury-spe
cific differences persisted. All injured ligaments had ultimate streng
ths 15-35 percent short of normal at 40 weeks and the femorally-injure
d ligaments were weaker than normal at this time. These results sugges
t that rabbit MCLs, injured near either end, heal more slowly that tho
se injured in their midsubstance and develop abnormal insertion morpho
logy.