Abstract
When biomechanical properties of tendons are studied, the technique of clamping the tendons in the testing machine presents a methodological challenge, especially when murine tendons are examined. These short tendons tend to rupture at the transition line to the fixation, leading to false interpretations. Therefore a new clamping technique for investigation of healthy murine Achilles tendons (n = 50) was developed, in which the intramuscular tendon fibers were fixed between two paper strips and the calcaneus was wedged into a conical slot in a wooden block and then mounted in the testing machine (n = 20). This technique was compared with the conventional clamping technique that fixes both ends of the tendon by clamps (n = 15) and an earlier described method that used glue or plastic cement for the fixation of the intramuscular tendon fibers and calcaneus in the testing machine (n