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Tendon and ligament regeneration and repair: clinical relevance and developmental paradigm.

TLDR
A greater understanding of the molecular mechanisms involved in T/L development and natural healing, coupled with the capability of producing complex biomaterials to deliver multiple biofactors with high spatiotemporal resolution and specificity, should lead to regenerative procedures that more closely recapitulate T/l morphogenesis.
Abstract
Tendon and ligament (T/L) are dense connective tissues connecting bone to muscle and bone to bone, respectively. Similar to other musculoskeletal tissues, T/L arise from the somitic mesoderm, but they are derived from a recently discovered somitic compartment, the syndetome. The adjacent sclerotome and myotome provide inductive signals to the interposing syndetome, thereby upregulating the expression of the transcription factor Scleraxis, which in turn leads to further tenogenic and ligamentogenic differentiation. These advances in the understanding of T/L development have been sought to provide a knowledge base for improving the healing of T/L injuries, a common clinical challenge due to the intrinsically poor natural healing response. Specifically, the three most common tendon injuries involve tearing of the rotator cuff of the shoulder, the flexor tendon of the hand, and the Achilles tendon. At present, injuries to these tissues are treated by surgical repair and/or conservative approaches, including biophysical modalities such as physical rehabilitation and cryotherapy. Unfortunately, the healing tissue forms fibrovascular scar and possesses inferior mechanical and biochemical properties as compared to native T/L. Therefore, tissue engineers have sought to improve upon the natural healing response by augmenting the injured tissue with cells, scaffolds, bioactive agents, and mechanical stimulation. These strategies show promise, both in vitro and in vivo, for improving T/L healing. However, several challenges remain in restoring full T/L function following injury, including uncertainties over the optimal combination of these biological agents as well how to best deliver tissue engineered elements to the injury site. A greater understanding of the molecular mechanisms involved in T/L development and natural healing, coupled with the capability of producing complex biomaterials to deliver multiple growth factors with high spatiotemporal resolution and specificity, will allow tissue engineers to more closely recapitulate T/L morphogenesis, thereby offering future patients the prospect of T/L regeneration, as opposed to simple tissue repair.

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Tenogenic differentiation of human MSCs induced by the topography of electrochemically aligned collagen threads

TL;DR: ELAC has a significant potential to be used as a tendon replacement and in the development of an osteotendinous construct towards the regeneration of bone-tendon interfaces, as well as induces tenogenic differentiation of human MSCs by presenting an aligned and dense collagen substrate, akin to the tendon itself.
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Expression of growth factors in the early phase of supraspinatus tendon healing in rabbits.

TL;DR: It is likely that each of these growth factors plays a role in the early phase of healing of the supraspinatus tendon in rabbits.
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Functional efficacy of tendon repair processes.

TL;DR: The epidemiology of tendon injury and repair is examined, the biology and biomechanics of normal tendon, natural healing, and repair are explored, and new treatment strategies such as functional tissue engineering are discussed.
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Complications After Flexor Tendon Repair: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

TL;DR: The published literature supports use of the modified Kessler repair technique with an epitendinous suture to minimize complications and suggests that there has been no definitive improvement in reported complications before and after 2000.
Journal ArticleDOI

Tendon and ligament: development, repair and disease.

TL;DR: This work will first review recent work on tendon embryology and discuss ligament formation, which has been less documented, and summarize the current knowledge of T/L molecular architecture, which is a major cause for disease.
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