Guest guest Posted January 19, 2004 Report Share Posted January 19, 2004 I thought this might interest some. http://www.tendinosis.org/injury.html .... Normal tendons and ligaments consist mostly of Type I collagen, with smaller amounts of Type III collagen. When you get tendinosis, some of your collagen is injured and breaks down. Your body tries to heal the tendon, but when you have chronic tendinosis your body doesn't repair the collagen properly. Usually you can't see the tendinosis injury from the outside of the body; swelling, heat, and redness are symptoms of an acute injury, not a chronic tendinosis injury. However, the tissue often looks different to the naked eye during surgery, with tendinosis showing up as tendon that looks dull, slightly brown, and soft instead of white, glistening, and firm. Researchers have analyzed samples of tendons and ligaments under the microscope to discover the abnormalities that occur on a cellular scale in overuse injuries. Research has shown that chronic overuse injuries such as tendinosis (including Achilles, rotator cuff, lateral and medial elbow, posterior tibial, digital flexor, and patellar), as well as carpal tunnel syndrome and even TMJ disorders are associated with a failed healing response in which the body's fibroblasts produce abnormal tendon and ligament collagen.[1,4,5,6,7,8,9,13,14,18,40,42] The composition and structure of the collagen is abnormal compared to uninjured tendon and ligament tissue. The following differences have been observed: * The total amount of collagen is decreased (since breakdown exceeds repair). * The amounts of proteoglycans and glycosaminoglycans are increased (possibly in response to increased compressive forces associated with the repetitive motion). * The ratio of Type III to Type I collagen is abnormally high. * The normal parallel bundled fiber structure is disturbed; the continuity of the collagen is lost with disorganized fiber structure and evidence of both collagen repair and collagen degeneration. * Microtears and collagen fiber separations are seen. Many of the collagen fibers are thin, fragile, and separated from each other. * The number of fibroblast cells is increased; the tenocytes look different, with a more blast-like morphology (the cells look thicker, less linear). These differences show that the cells are actively trying to repair the tissue. * The vascularity is increased. * Inflammatory cells are usually not seen in the tendon but sometimes are seen in the synovium and peritendinous structures (the areas around the tendon). * Electronic microscopic observations have shown alterations in the size and shape of mitochondria in the nuclei of the tenocytes. .... The tendinosis cycle begins when breakdown exceeds repair. Repetitive motion causes microinjuries that accumulate with time. Collagen breaks down and the tendon tries to repair itself, but the cells produce new collagen with an abnormal structure and composition. The new collagen has an abnormally high Type III/Type I ratio. Experiments show that the excess Type III collagen at the expense of Type I collagen weakens the tendon, making it prone to further injury. Part of the problem is that the new collagen fibers are less organized into the normal parallel structure, making the tendon less able to withstand tensile stress along the direction of the tendon. Therefore, tendinosis is a slow accumulation of little injuries that are not repaired properly and leave the tendon vulnerable to yet more injury. This failed healing process is the reason many people with tendinosis don't completely heal from it and can't go back to their previous level of activity. Once the tendinosis cycle starts, the tendon rarely heals back to its pre-injury state. .... The source of pain from tendinosis is controversial. At first, doctors labeled chronic tendon injuries as " tendinitis " and attributed the pain to inflammation. Later, doctors discovered that inflammatory cells were rarely seen in microscope slides of chronic tendon injuries. Therefore, many doctors have switched to the term " tendinosis " and have started to develop alternative theories about the source of pain. The pain from tendinosis probably comes partly from the physical injury itself (separation of collagen fibers and mechanical disruption of tissue) and partly from irritating non-inflammatory biochemical substances that are produced as part of the injury process. The biochemical substances probably irritate the pain receptors in the tendon and surrounding area. NSAIDs and cortisone injections might reduce the pain of tendinosis by reducing or blocking these biochemical substances, rather than by reducing inflammation.... Some people find that when the tendinosis in their wrists has an especially bad flare-up, they experience tingling or numbness in some fingers (carpal tunnel symptoms). The old explanation for the numbness was that severe flare-ups cause inflammation that presses on the nerves to the fingers and causes numbness. When the flare-up subsides, the numbness goes away. The newer theory is that the tendinosis injury causes thickening of the tendons in the wrists (partly from higher water content associated with the higher proteoglycan content), and this thickening can cause pressure on nerves to the fingers. Despite the larger cross-sectional area, tendons with tendinosis are still weaker than healthy tendons because of the structural abnormalities described in the previous sections. In addition to thickening of the tendon, inflammation of the tendon sheath can also put pressure on nerves to the fingers. Although the tendons and ligaments themselves don't usually show inflammation, the surrounding tissue sometimes does. ... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 19, 2004 Report Share Posted January 19, 2004 > I thought this might interest some. > > > http://www.tendinosis.org/injury.html Very much interested in this article - fascinating reading. Thanks for posting it. I was particularly interested in the conditions that were listed, rotator cuff, lateral and medial elbow, tibial, patellar, and carpal tunnel, because these are areas that I have had a fair degree of success with using energy to treat pain symptoms. I printed it off and will be digesting it more thoroughly. Thanks again. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 19, 2004 Report Share Posted January 19, 2004 > I thought this might interest some. > > > http://www.tendinosis.org/injury.html Very much interested in this article - fascinating reading. Thanks for posting it. I was particularly interested in the conditions that were listed, rotator cuff, lateral and medial elbow, tibial, patellar, and carpal tunnel, because these are areas that I have had a fair degree of success with using energy to treat pain symptoms. I printed it off and will be digesting it more thoroughly. Thanks again. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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