Author
Listed:
- Thomas Notermans
- Petri Tanska
- Rami K Korhonen
- Hanifeh Khayyeri
- Hanna Isaksson
Abstract
Mechano-regulation during tendon healing, i.e. the relationship between mechanical stimuli and cellular response, has received more attention recently. However, the basic mechanobiological mechanisms governing tendon healing after a rupture are still not well-understood. Literature has reported spatial and temporal variations in the healing of ruptured tendon tissue. In this study, we explored a computational modeling approach to describe tendon healing. In particular, a novel 3D mechano-regulatory framework was developed to investigate spatio-temporal evolution of collagen content and orientation, and temporal evolution of tendon stiffness during early tendon healing. Based on an extensive literature search, two possible relationships were proposed to connect levels of mechanical stimuli to collagen production. Since literature remains unclear on strain-dependent collagen production at high levels of strain, the two investigated production laws explored the presence or absence of collagen production upon non-physiologically high levels of strain (>15%). Implementation in a finite element framework, pointed to large spatial variations in strain magnitudes within the callus tissue, which resulted in predictions of distinct spatial distributions of collagen over time. The simulations showed that the magnitude of strain was highest in the tendon core along the central axis, and decreased towards the outer periphery. Consequently, decreased levels of collagen production for high levels of tensile strain were shown to accurately predict the experimentally observed delayed collagen production in the tendon core. In addition, our healing framework predicted evolution of collagen orientation towards alignment with the tendon axis and the overall predicted tendon stiffness agreed well with experimental data. In this study, we explored the capability of a numerical model to describe spatial and temporal variations in tendon healing and we identified that understanding mechano-regulated collagen production can play a key role in explaining heterogeneities observed during tendon healing.Author summary: The frequency of Achilles tendon ruptures has increased over the last decades. Treatments can involve different loading or unloading strategies of the Achilles tendon during healing. However, there is no consensus on the optimal treatment since the effect of loading on Achilles tendon healing is not fully understood. Recent experimental studies have shown that the tendon heals differently in different regions, particularly the core of the tendon callus seems to behave differently from the outside of the tendon. To better understand these spatial variations in Achilles tendon healing, a 3D computational model of a normally loaded healing tendon was created. We predicted tissue formation and reorganization upon mechanical stimulation of the healing tissue. We observed that strain-dependent tissue formation could explain recent observations of decreased tissue formation in the core of the healing callus during early tendon healing. This work investigates how mechanical stimuli affect the formation and reorganization of the newly formed tissue, considering both distributions in space and over time.
Suggested Citation
Thomas Notermans & Petri Tanska & Rami K Korhonen & Hanifeh Khayyeri & Hanna Isaksson, 2021.
"A numerical framework for mechano-regulated tendon healing—Simulation of early regeneration of the Achilles tendon,"
PLOS Computational Biology, Public Library of Science, vol. 17(2), pages 1-19, February.
Handle:
RePEc:plo:pcbi00:1008636
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1008636
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