scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Overuse tendon conditions : Time to change a confusing terminology

Nicola Maffulli
- 01 Nov 1998 - 
- Vol. 14, Iss: 8, pp 840-843
TLDR
In overuse clinical conditions in and around tendons, frank inflammation is infrequent, and is associated mostly with tendon ruptures, and this leads athletes and coaches to underestimate the proven chronicity of the condition.
Abstract
In overuse clinical conditions in and around tendons, frank inflammation is infrequent, and is associated mostly with tendon ruptures. Tendinosis implies tendon degeneration without clinical or histological signs of intratendinous inflammation, and is not necessarily symptomatic. Patients undergoing an operation for Achilles tendinopathy show similar areas of degeneration. When the term tendinitis is used in a clinical context, it does not refer to a specific histopathological entity. However, tendinitis is commonly used for conditions that are truly tendinoses, and this leads athletes and coaches to underestimate the proven chronicity of the condition. Paratenonitis is characterized by acute edema and hypermia of the paratenon, with infiltration of inflammatory cells, possibly with production of a fibrinous exudate that fills the tendon sheath, causing the typical crepitus that can be felt on clinical examination. The term partial tear of a tendon should describe a macroscopically evident subcutaneous partial tear of a tendon, an uncommon acute lesion. Most articles describing the surgical treatment of 'partial tears' of a given tendon in reality deal with degenerative tendinopathies. The combination of pain, swelling, and impaired performance should be labeled tendinopathy. According to the tissues affected, the terms tendinopathy, paratendinopathy, or pantendinopathy should be used.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

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.
Journal ArticleDOI

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

TL;DR: 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.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mechanobiology of tendon

TL;DR: The discussion begins with the mechanical forces acting on tendons in vivo, tendon structure and composition, and its mechanical properties, followed by a discussion of tendon healing and the role of mechanical loading and fibroblast contraction in tissue healing.
Journal ArticleDOI

Patellar tendinopathy: some aspects of basic science and clinical management.

TL;DR: Surgical treatment for Achilles tendinopathy usually involves removal of adhesions and degenerated areas and decompression of the tendon by tenotomy or measures that influence the local circulation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Types and epidemiology of tendinopathy.

TL;DR: Empirical studies are important when planning prevention programs for tendon injuries because of individual sport cultures and different sport habits in different countries, national epidemiologic studies are of importance in each individual country.
References
More filters
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

Cell-Matrix Response in Tendon Injury

TL;DR: The healing response after tendon injury is defined by cell matrix adaptive capability, and the potential for future modulation of injury repair by protein mediators or growth factors appears promising.
Journal ArticleDOI

Chronic Achilles tendinopathy. A survey of surgical and histopathologic findings

TL;DR: In this paper, the surgical findings and the histopathology are reported for 163 patients (134 males, 29 females; mean age, 38 years; range, 13-72 years; 75% athletes) with chronic Achilles tendinopathy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Elbow tendinosis/tennis elbow

TL;DR: The histology of pathologic tennis elbow tissue reveals noninflammatory tissue, thus the term angio-fibroblastic tendinosis, which is a revascularization and collagen repair of this pathologic tissue by rehabilitative exercise.
Journal ArticleDOI

A classification of achilles tendon disease

TL;DR: It is the opinion is that a precise difference exists between the structures of these two types of coverings.
Related Papers (5)