Abstract
1. A series of experiments on adult rabbits was carried out in which a tendon was transplanted and embedded in a bony tunnel and traversed a joint after the manner of a tenodesis.
2. Histological observations were made on the reaction of surrounding bone and tendon at intervals over a period of 307 days.
3. The findings suggest that the buried tendon undergoes a process of progressive degeneration, and that host cells issuing from the adjacent bone marrow infiltrate and ultimately replace it by new tendon tissue.
4. The invading cells are believed to be derived, as a result of the provocative stimuli provided by the experiment, from primitive reticular cells of the haemopoietic tissue.
5. The tunnelled bone undergoes considerable remodelling and associated with this is the presence of a considerable number of osteoblasts and osteoclasts.