1 / 43

Mechanisms of Injury and Repair

Mechanisms of Injury and Repair. Classification of injury. The repair process. Ligament healing. Functional knee brace. Classifications of injury. According to mechanism: primary vs secondary. According to tissues: soft tissues vs hard tissues. (Oakes 1992). Primary injuries (1).

lewis-dixon
Télécharger la présentation

Mechanisms of Injury and Repair

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Mechanisms of Injury and Repair Classification of injury. The repair process. Ligament healing. Functional knee brace.

  2. Classifications of injury • According to mechanism: • primary vs secondary. • According to tissues: • soft tissues vs hard tissues. (Oakes 1992)

  3. Primary injuries (1) • direct/extrinsic: usually high forces, result in severe injuries. • indirect/intrinsic: eccentric overload of musculotendinous units.

  4. Primary injuries (2) • Overuse injury: repetitive friction leads to tenosynovitis. • Chronic repetitive microfatigue: stress # or Osgood-Schlatter’s disease.

  5. Secondary injuries • Short term: previous mismanaged injury e.g. resolving phase of inflammation when pain is down. • Long term: e.g. secondary O.A. knee due to ACLD.

  6. The repair process (1) • Three phases of tissue repair in general. • Inflammation phase. • Repair phase. • Remodelling phase.

  7. The repair process (2) • Acute inflammation at initial 72 hours. • New blood vessels to the wound. • Healing: wound must be clean and blood must be available. • Little inflammation, healing is slow; excessive inflammation, over scarring.

  8. The repair process (3) • Matrix and cellular proliferation phase 72 hours to 6 weeks. • Active synthesis of collagen/proteoglycan matrix forming granulation tissue. • Induce epithelialization and wound contraction. • Neovascularization probably controlled by growth factors.

  9. The repair process (4) • New collagen is mainly type III. • Collagen fibrils are small and not oriented. • Poor material properties of the scar tissue. • Remodelling and maturation: 6 weeks to several months. • Loading, movements determine collagen maturation and alignment.

  10. Ligament healing 1 • Proximity of rupture ends. • Availability of repair cells. • Synovial fluid (the hostile environment). • Load during remodelling.

  11. Ligament healing 2 • Complete sectioning of the PLB of goat ACL (Ng et al 1996 AJSM). • No surgical repair. • Free activities in a farm.

  12. Ligament healing 3 • Mechanical testing at 12 wk (n=3), 24 wk (N=3), 52 wk (N=3) and 3 yr (N=2). • Laxity testing. • Instron material testing for UTS, stiffness, Young’s modulus and load relaxation.

  13. Ligament healing 4 • Evidence of healing at 12 weeks with translucent fibrous tissue. • Repair tissues appeared normal at 1 year. • Indistinguishable repair tissue from normal tissue surrounding the repair at 3 years. • The whole ligament bundle has grown in size.

  14. Ligament healing 5 • No significant difference in laxity among all groups. • The intact amb provided the restrain? • Not enough drawer force to test the ligament?

  15. Ligament healing 6 • General increase in normalised UTS with time. • Significantly higher UTS at 3 years than 12 weeks. • Control UTS: 1167 N; UTS 3 years: 1493N • Ligament failure at 12 and 24 weeks, but bony avulsion at 3 years.

  16. Ligament healing 7 • General increase in stiffness with time. • Significantly higher stiffness at 3 years than 12 weeks. • Control stiffness: 258 N/mm; 12 weeks: 146 N/mm; 1 year: 198 N/mm; 3 years: 250 N/mm.

  17. Ligament healing 8 • General increase in Young’s modulus with time. • Control modulus: 487 MPa; 12 weeks: 257 MPa; 1 year: 408 MPa; 3 year: 351 MPa. • Why is stiffness different from Young’s modulus? • Clinical implication.

  18. Ligament healing 9 • No general trend in load relaxation pattern with time. • Frank (1985) found scar would load relax quicker than normal tissues. • This could result in overloading to the secondary restraints.

  19. Functional knee brace (1) • Three functions:  biomechanical  physiological  proprioceptive

  20. Functional knee brace (2) • Little mechanical protection (Bagger, 1992; Beynnon, 1992; Warming & Jorgensen, 1998). • Increase energy consumption (Highgenboten, 1991). • increasing relaxation pressure of muscles (Styf, 1994).

  21. Functional knee brace (3) • Improve proprioception and AP body sway (Kuster, 1999). • Improve cutaneous sensation (Beynnon, 1999; Birmingham, 1998). • Controversies among studies on knee brace. • Mechanical vs. non-mechanical components of the braces. • Tests to simulate sports activities.

  22. Study objectives (Wu, Ng, Mak 2001a & b) • To compare: (1) no brace, (2) Donjoy legend functional brace, (3) mechanical placebo brace.

  23. Parameters measured • Running and turning. • Jumping and landing. • Isokinetic performance. • Joint sense.

  24. Methods • Subjects • 31 subjects aged 15-40 with single limb injury. • Arthroscopic ACL reconstruction with semitendinosus by the same surgeon. • At least 5 months post-operation.

  25. Running and Turning Test • Subjects ran on a “figure-of-eight” runway of 22 m long for 10 laps. • Time of running and turning on each side recorded.

  26. Jumping and landing Test • Subject ran on a semicircular path. • Jumped and turned internally with the affected leg. • Landed on a floor marker (20Cm X 28Cm). • Accuracy of landing and time to complete the run/jump task recorded.

  27. Isokinetic Test • 60o/s & 180o/s. • 0 - 60o of knee flexion. • Peak torque and total work recorded.

  28. Copying of knee joint angle • Five pre-set angles by passive positioning. • Subjects indicated the perceived angle on a knee model (Attfield et al 1996). • Mean Difference in the angles recorded.

  29. Result 1

  30. Result 2

  31. Result 3

  32. Result 4

  33. Result 5

  34. Result 6

  35. Result 7

  36. Conclusion 1 • Subjects ran 3.2 % - 4.6 % slower in both bracing conditions than no brace. • Similar to the report of increase energy expenditure values (Highgenboten 1991).

  37. Conclusion 2 • Bracing enhanced the static knee joint sense. • Improvement was not due to mechanical restraint of the brace.

  38. Conclusion 3 • Bracing had slowed down running/turning. • Bracing did not improve isokinetic and jumping performance.

More Related