Engineered Tissue Graft for Repair of Injured Infraspinatus Rotator Cuff Tendon

Rotator cuff tears constitute a vast majority of shoulder-related injuries, occurring in a wide population range and increasing in incidence with age. Current treatments for full thickness tears use suture to secure the ruptured tendon back to its native attachment site and often retear due to impro...

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Veröffentlicht in:Tissue engineering. Part A 2023-09, Vol.29 (17-18), p.471-480
Hauptverfasser: Kennedy, Christopher S, Núñez, Carla N Villacís, Poli, Andrea, Vega-Soto, Emmanuel, Arruda, Ellen M, Larkin, Lisa M
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container_end_page 480
container_issue 17-18
container_start_page 471
container_title Tissue engineering. Part A
container_volume 29
creator Kennedy, Christopher S
Núñez, Carla N Villacís
Poli, Andrea
Vega-Soto, Emmanuel
Arruda, Ellen M
Larkin, Lisa M
description Rotator cuff tears constitute a vast majority of shoulder-related injuries, occurring in a wide population range and increasing in incidence with age. Current treatments for full thickness tears use suture to secure the ruptured tendon back to its native attachment site and often retear due to improper enthesis regeneration. To reduce the occurrence of retear, our laboratory developed an engineered tendon graft for rotator cuff repair (ETG-RC) to serve as an underlayment to traditional suture repair. We hypothesize the ETG-RC will aid in the repair of the torn rotator cuff tendon by promoting the regeneration of a functional enthesis. This devitalized graft fabricated from ovine-derived bone marrow stromal cells was evaluated for biomechanical and histomorphology properties in an ovine infraspinatus rotator cuff repair model. Compared with a current standard practice Suture-Only model, the ETG-RC repair showed comparable high strain-to-failure forces, greater fibrocartilage deposition, regeneration of zonal gradients, and Shapey's fibers formation, indicative of enthesis regeneration. Enthesis regeneration after rotator cuff repair should repair mechanical properties and alleviate the need for subsequent surgeries required due to retear. The ETG-RC could potentially be used for repairing other tendon injuries throughout the body.
doi_str_mv 10.1089/ten.tea.2022.0196
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subjects Animals
Biomechanical Phenomena
Connective Tissue
Humans
Original
Rotator Cuff - surgery
Rotator Cuff Injuries - surgery
Sheep
Tendon Injuries - surgery
Tendons
Wound Healing
title Engineered Tissue Graft for Repair of Injured Infraspinatus Rotator Cuff Tendon
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