Shrive N, Chimich D, Marchuk L, Wilson J, Brant R, Frank C
McCaig Centre for Joint Injury and Arthritis Research, Department of Civil Engineering, University of Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
J Orthop Res. 1995 Nov;13(6):923-9. doi: 10.1002/jor.1100130617.
This study evaluated microscopic flaws in the healing rabbit medial collateral ligament and their significance in terms of the material properties of this ligament during healing. A gap injury was created in the 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 analysis of the flaws was carried out in subgroups of animals. The medial collateral ligaments from four of the left hindlimbs (randomly selected) were used as uninjured contralateral controls. In one histologic section of each area of scar tissue and the analogous area in the controls, specified tissue flaws (blood vessels, fat cells, hypercellular areas, loose matrix, disorganized matrix, or a combination of these) were measured by four independent and blinded observers. The results showed 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 weeks. 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 compared 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 analysis showed a very strong functional association between the mean area of the largest flaw and the stress at failure (p < 0.004) and between the mean flaw area as a percentage of the total section area and the elastic modulus (p < 0.001). This study therefore demonstrates that it is possible to quantify material flaws in scar tissue in rabbit medial collateral 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 with less tensile strength and more flaws with less stiffness).
本研究评估了愈合过程中兔内侧副韧带的微观缺陷,以及这些缺陷在韧带愈合过程中对其材料特性的影响。在15只骨骼成熟(12个月大)的新西兰白兔的右后肢内侧副韧带中部制造了间隙损伤。在术后3、6或14周的时间间隔,对动物亚组进行缺陷的组织形态计量学分析。将来自左侧后肢的四条内侧副韧带(随机选取)作为未受伤的对侧对照。在每个瘢痕组织区域和对照中的类似区域的一个组织学切片中,由四名独立且不知情的观察者测量特定的组织缺陷(血管、脂肪细胞、细胞增多区域、疏松基质、紊乱基质或这些的组合)。结果表明,在每个愈合组中,缺陷的平均总面积占总切片面积的百分比以及最大缺陷的平均面积随愈合时间而降低,但在14周时未达到对照值。由于在测量缺陷之前无法对愈合中的内侧副韧带进行力学测试(由于破坏试验的破坏性),因此将缺陷数据与另一组类似损伤并经过力学测试的内侧副韧带的材料强度和刚度进行比较(先前已发表的数据)。最大似然统计分析表明,最大缺陷的平均面积与破坏应力之间存在非常强的功能关联(p < 0.004),并且缺陷平均面积占总切片面积的百分比与弹性模量之间也存在非常强的功能关联(p < 0.001)。因此,本研究表明,可以量化兔内侧副韧带瘢痕组织中的材料缺陷,随着瘢痕重塑,这些缺陷会随着愈合时间变小,并且在该模型中缺陷与韧带的材料特性存在功能关联(缺陷越大,拉伸强度越小;缺陷越多,刚度越小)。