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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_16 | Pages 126 - 126
1 Nov 2018
De Vulder N Burssens A Cambré I Venken K Bongaerts W Burssens P Elewaut D
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Achilles tendinopathy is classically defined as a tendinosis devoid of an inflammatory cell population. However, recent literature suggests inflammation as a mediator in the pathogenesis. These finding were mainly based on semi-quantative immunohistochemistry. We therefore used flow cytometry to obatain a more accurate identification and quantification of the different cell types involved. Thirty-two samples were obtained from twelve patients with chronic tendinopathic lesions undergoing Achilles tendon surgery. Samples obtained from three patients with hemiplegia requiring surgical release due to spastic Achilles tendons served as control. We used two panels to identify the myeloid and lymphoid population targeting the following markers: CD45, CD3, CD8, CD4, CD19, CD11b, CD56, CD14, CD16, Vα7.2, 6b11, CD161, TCRγδ. To assess the presence of fibroblasts CD90 was targeted. The mean count of CD45+ hematopoietic cells in the tendinopathic samples was significantly higher than in the control samples, respectively 13.27% and 3.24% of the total cell count (P<0.001). The mean fraction of CD3+ cells present in the complete cell population was significantly higher in pathological samples than in control samples, respectively 1.70% and 0.37% (P<0.05). Presence of CD19+ B cells was not reported. The mean fraction of γδ T cells was significantly higher in tendinopathic samples compared to blood samples of the same patient and consisted of 12.9% and 5.8% γδ T cells respectively (P<0.05). These findings support an inflammatory cell infiltration in midportion Achilles tendinopathy that show similarities to enthesitis in SpA. This implies a potential target to investigate in novel treatment modalities


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 98-B, Issue 10 | Pages 1312 - 1319
1 Oct 2016
Spang C Alfredson H Docking SI Masci L Andersson G

In recent years, the plantaris tendon has been implicated in the development of chronic painful mid-portion Achilles tendinopathy. In some cases, a thickened plantaris tendon is closely associated with the Achilles tendon, and surgical excision of the plantaris tendon has been reported to be curative in patients who have not derived benefit following conservative treatment and surgical interventions.

The aim of this review is to outline the basic aspects of, and the recent research findings, related to the plantaris tendon, covering anatomical and clinical studies including those dealing with histology, imaging and treatment.

Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2016;98-B:1312–19.