Chinese Journal of Tissue Engineering Research ›› 2017, Vol. 21 ›› Issue (8): 1257-1261.doi: 10.3969/j.issn.2095-4344.2017.08.019

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High-frequency ultrasound in the assessment of tendon injury and repair: study protocol for a self-controlled animal trial

Liu Zhuang, Li Hua-guang, Zhang Hai-feng, Li Xiao-dan, Han Shao-guang   

  1. Burn Department of Hand and Foot, Central People’s Hospital of Siping, Siping 136000, Jilin Province, China
  • Received:2016-12-14 Online:2017-03-18 Published:2017-04-14
  • Contact: Liu Zhuang, Burn Department of Hand and Foot, Central People’s Hospital of Siping, Siping 136000, Jilin Province, China
  • About author:Liu Zhuang, Associate chief physician, Burn Department of Hand and Foot, Central People’s Hospital of Siping, Siping 136000, Jilin Province, China
  • Supported by:

    the Science and Technology Development Program of Siping city

Abstract:

BACKGROUND: Tendon injury is common in clinic, which is mainly treated by surgical anastomosis. Postoperative tendon healing is usually assessed through surgeons’ experience due to high cost and application restrictions of MRI examination. Thus there is still a lack of a convenient and objective imaging support. With the advancement and widespread application of high-frequency ultrasound, the diagnosis rate of tendon injury has been improved remarkably; thereafter, high-frequency ultrasound used for assessing tendon injury and repair
has become an issue of concern.
OBJECTIVE: To clarify the ultrasonic imaging features of tendon repair through high-frequency ultrasound scan combined with histological examination.
METHODS: This was a single-central, preoperative and self-controlled animal experiment and finished in the Central People’s Hospital of Siping, China. 130 adult male Highbrow chickens were selected and were then randomized into 13 groups (n=10 per group). One side of each chicken hind foot was randomly selected as experimental limb to undergo achillotomy followed by repair using the modified Kessler method (groups 2-13) or no treatment (group 1); the contralateral limb served as control. Moreover, passive flexion-extension functional training targeting the experimental limbs was performed in the groups 8-13 beginning at the 1st day after surgical anastomosis, several times a day. The high-frequency ultrasound and hematoxylin- eosin staining were conducted before and after chillotomy (group 1), and at 3 (groups 2 and 8), 7 (groups 3 and 9), 14 (groups 4 and 10), 21 (groups 5 and 11), 35 (groups 6 and 12) and 42 (groups 7 and 13) days after surgical anastomosis, respectively.
RESULTS AND CONCLUSION: The primary measurement outcomes were the repair and healing of the injured tendon as assessed by high-frequency ultrasound; the secondary outcomes were the pathological manifestations of the injured tendon detected by hematoxylin-eosin staining. Our findings will provide preclinical proof for high-frequency ultrasound use in the assessment of tendon injury, repair and healing as well as for the rehabilitation therapy that promotes function recovery in the future.

中国组织工程研究杂志出版内容重点:组织构建;骨细胞;软骨细胞;细胞培养;成纤维细胞;血管内皮细胞;骨质疏松组织工程

Key words: Animal Experimentation, Tenotomy, Surgical Procedures, Operative, Ultrasonography

CLC Number: