Abstract
Repair of tendon injuries aims to restore length, mechanical strength and function. We hypothesise that Demineralised Cortical Bone (DCB) present in biological tendon environment will result in remodelling of the DCB into ligament tissue. A cadaveric study was carried out to optimize the technique. The distal 1cm of the patellar tendon was excised and DCB was used to bridge the defect. 4 models were examined, Model-1: one anchor, Model-2: 2 anchors, Model-3: 2 anchors with double looped off-loading thread, Model-4: 2 anchors with 3 threads off-loading loop. 6 mature sheep undergone surgical resection of the distal 1cm of the right patellar tendon. Repair was done using DCB with 2 anchors. Immediate mobilisation was allowed, animals were sacrificed at 12 weeks. Force plate assessments were done at weeks 3, 6, 9 and 12. Radiographs were taken and pQCT scan was done prior to histological analysis. In the cadaveric study, the median failure force for the 4 models; 250N, 290N, 767N and 934N respectively. In the animal study, none of the specimens showed evidence of ossification of the DCB. One animal failed to show satisfactory progress, X-rays showed patella alta, on specimen retrieval there was no damage to the DCB and sutures and no evidence of anchor pullout. Functional weight bearing was 79% at week12. Histological analysis proved remodelling of the collagen leading to ligamentisation of the DCB. Results prove that DCB can be used as biological tendon substitute, combined with the use of suture bone anchor early mobilisation can be achieved.