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Journal ArticleDOI

Histopathology of common tendinopathies. Update and implications for clinical management.

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TLDR
The histopathological findings in athletes with overuse tendinopathies are consistent with those in tendinosis — a degenerative condition of unknown aetiology, which may have implications for the prognosis and timing of a return to sport after experiencing tendon symptoms.
Abstract
Tendon disorders are a major problem for participants in competitive and recreational sports. To try to determine whether the histopathology underlying these conditions explains why they often prove recalcitrant to treatment, we reviewed studies of the histopathology of sports-related, symptomatic Achilles, patellar, extensor carpi radialis brevis and rotator cuff tendons. The literature indicates that healthy tendons appear glistening white to the naked eye and microscopy reveals a hierarchical arrangement of tightly packed, parallel bundles of collagen fibres that have a characteristic reflectivity under polarised light. Stainable ground substance (extracellular matrix) is absent and vasculature is inconspicuous. Tenocytes are generally inconspicuous and fibroblasts and myofibroblasts absent. In stark contrast, symptomatic tendons in athletes appear grey and amorphous to the naked eye and microscopy reveals discontinuous and disorganised collagen fibres that lack reflectivity under polarised light. This is associated with an increase in the amount of mucoid ground substance, which is confirmed with Alcian blue stain. At sites of maximal mucoid change, tenocytes, when present, are plump and chondroid in appearance (exaggerated fibrocartilaginous metaplasia). These changes are accompanied by the increasingly conspicuous presence of cells within the tendon tissue, most of which have a fibroblastic or myofibroblastic appearance (smooth muscle actin is demonstrated using an avidin biotin technique). Maximal cellular proliferation is accompanied by prominent capillary proliferation and a tendency for discontinuity of collagen fibres in this area. Often, there is an abrupt discontinuity of both vascular and myofibroblastic proliferation immediately adjacent to the area of greatest abnormality. The most significant feature is the absence of inflammatory cells. These observations confirm that the histopathological findings in athletes with overuse tendinopathies are consistent with those in tendinosis--a degenerative condition of unknown aetiology. This may have implications for the prognosis and timing of a return to sport after experiencing tendon symptoms. As the common overuse tendon conditions are rarely, if ever, caused by 'tendinitis', we suggest the term 'tendinopathy' be used to describe the common overuse tendon conditions. We conclude that effective treatment of athletes with tendinopathies must target the most common underlying histopathology, tendinosis, a noninflammatory condition.

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Citations
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Tendon injury and tendinopathy: healing and repair.

TL;DR: There is limited and mixed high-level evidence to support the, albeit common, clinical use of these modalities and further research and scientific evaluation are required before biological solutions become realistic options.
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Biology of tendon injury: healing, modeling and remodeling

TL;DR: The structure of tendons is described, the process of tendon healing is an indivisible process that can be categorized into three overlapping phases for descriptive purposes, and the pathophysiology of tendon injury and healing is reviewed.
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Where tendons and ligaments meet bone: attachment sites (‘entheses’) in relation to exercise and/or mechanical load

TL;DR: This review focuses on the structure–function correlations of entheses on both the hard and the soft tissue sides of the junction, and the degenerative, rather than inflammatory, nature of most enthesopathies in sport.
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Efficacy and safety of corticosteroid injections and other injections for management of tendinopathy: a systematic review of randomised controlled trials

TL;DR: It is shown consistent findings between many high-quality randomised controlled trials that corticosteroid injections reduced pain in the short term compared with other interventions, but this effect was reversed at intermediate and long terms.
Journal ArticleDOI

Prevalence of Jumper's Knee among Elite Athletes from Different Sports: A Cross-sectional Study:

TL;DR: Jumper’s knee is almost twice as common among male nonelite athletes compared with female athletes and varies between 14.4% and 2.5% for different sports, showing a significant difference between sports with different loading characteristics.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Heavy-Load Eccentric Calf Muscle Training For the Treatment of Chronic Achilles Tendinosis

TL;DR: The treatment model with heavy-load eccentric calf muscle training has a very good short-term effect on athletes in their early forties.
Book

The Shoulder, Rupture of the Supraspinatus Tendon and Other Lesions in or about the Subacromial Bursa

E. A. Codman
TL;DR: Covering shoulder disabilities, this text examines the pathological processes capable of causing them and describes in detail the lesions affecting the shoulder.
Book

Surgery of the shoulder

De Palma, +1 more
Journal ArticleDOI

Tennis elbow. The surgical treatment of lateral epicondylitis.

TL;DR: Of the 1,213 clinical cases of lateral tennis elbow seen during the time period from December 19, 1971, to October 31, 1977, eighty-eight elbows in eighty-two patients had operative treatment, and the lesion that was consistently identified at surgery was immature fibroblastic and vascular infiltration of the origin of the extensor carpi radialis brevis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Studies of surgical outcome after patellar tendinopathy: clinical significance of methodological deficiencies and guidelines for future studies. Victorian Institute of Sport Tendon Study Group.

TL;DR: It is concluded that study methodology may influence reported surgical outcome and practical guidelines for improving study design are suggested, as improved study design would provide clinicians with a more rigorous evidence‐base for treating patients who have recalcitrant patellar tendinopathy.
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