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Research Article

Correspondence of high-frequency ultrasound and histomorphometry of healing rabbit Achilles tendon tissue

, , , , &
Pages 123-131 | Received 30 Aug 2013, Accepted 22 Nov 2013, Published online: 24 Jan 2014
 

Abstract

Objectives: Static and dynamic high-frequency ultrasound of healing rabbit Achilles tendons were set in relationship to histomorphometric analyses at three and six weeks post-surgery.

Materials and methods: Twelve New Zealand White rabbits received a clean-cut Achilles tendon laceration (the medial and lateral Musculus gastrocnemius) and were repaired with a four-strand Becker suture. Six rabbits got additionally a tight polyester urethane tube at the repair site in order to vary the adhesion extent. Tendons were analysed by static and dynamic ultrasound (control: healthy contralateral legs). The ultrasound outcome was corresponded to the tendon shape, tenocyte and tenoblast density, tenocyte and tenoblast nuclei width, collagen fibre orientation and adhesion extent.

Results: The spindle-like morphology of healing tendons (ultrasound) was confirmed by the swollen epitenon (histology). Prediction of adhesion formation by dynamic ultrasound assessment was confirmed by histology (contact region to surrounding tissue). Hyperechogenic areas corresponded to acellular zones with aligned fibres and hypoechogenic zones to not yet oriented fibres and to cell-rich areas.

Conclusions: These findings add new in-depth structural knowledge to the established non-invasive analytical tool, ultrasound.

Notes

*This work was performed at the University Hospital Zurich, ZKF, Sternwartstrasse 14, 8091 Zürich, Switzerland.

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