Extracorporeal shock wave therapy in treatment of delayed bone-tendon healing

L Wang, L Qin, HB Lu, WH Cheung… - … American journal of …, 2008 - journals.sagepub.com
L Wang, L Qin, HB Lu, WH Cheung, H Yang, WN Wong, KM Chan, KS Leung
The American journal of sports medicine, 2008journals.sagepub.com
Background Extracorporeal shock wave therapy is indicated for treatment of chronic injuries
of soft tissues and delayed fracture healing and nonunion. No investigation has been
conducted to study the effect of shock wave on delayed healing at the bone-tendon junction.
Hypothesis Shock wave promotes osteogenesis, regeneration of fibrocartilage zone, and
remodeling of healing tissue in delayed healing of bone-tendon junction surgical repair.
Study Design Controlled laboratory study. Methods Twenty-eight mature rabbits were used …
Background
Extracorporeal shock wave therapy is indicated for treatment of chronic injuries of soft tissues and delayed fracture healing and nonunion. No investigation has been conducted to study the effect of shock wave on delayed healing at the bone-tendon junction.
Hypothesis
Shock wave promotes osteogenesis, regeneration of fibrocartilage zone, and remodeling of healing tissue in delayed healing of bone-tendon junction surgical repair.
Study Design
Controlled laboratory study.
Methods
Twenty-eight mature rabbits were used for establishing a delayed healing model at the patella–patellar tendon complex after partial patellectomy and then divided into control and shock wave groups. In the shock wave group, a single shock wave treatment was given at week 6 postoperatively to the patella–patellar tendon healing complex. Seven samples were harvested at week 8 and 7 samples at week 12 for radiologic, densitometric, histologic, and mechanical evaluations.
Results
Radiographic measurements showed 293.4% and 185.8% more new bone formation at the patella–patellar tendon healing junction in the shock wave group at weeks 8 and 12, respectively. Significantly better bone mineral status was found in the week 12 shock wave group. Histologically, the shock wave group showed more advanced remodeling in terms of better alignment of collagen fibers and thicker and more mature regenerated fibrocartilage zone at both weeks 8 and 12. Mechanical testing showed 167.7% and 145.1% higher tensile load and strength in the shock wave group at week 8 and week 12, respectively, compared with controls.
Conclusion
Extracorporeal shock wave promotes osteogenesis, regeneration of fibrocartilage zone, and remodeling in the delayed bone-to-tendon healing junction in rabbits.
Clinical Relevance
These results provide a foundation for future clinical studies toward establishment of clinical indication for treatment of delayed bone-to-tendon junction healing.
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