We analyzed mechanical tensile properties of 16 10-mm wide, full-thickness central parts of quadriceps tendons and patellar ligaments from paired knees of eight male donors (mean age, 24.9 years). Uniaxial tensile testing was performed in a servohydraulic materials testing machine at an extension rate of 1 mm/sec. Sixteen specimens were tested unconditioned and 16 specimens were tested after cyclic preconditioning (200 cycles between 50 N and 800 N at 0.5 Hz). Mean cross-sectional areas measured 64.6 +/- 8.4 mm2 for seven unconditioned and 61.9 +/- 9.0 mm2 for eight preconditioned quadriceps tendons and were significantly larger than those values of seven unconditioned and seven preconditioned patellar ligaments (36.8 +/- 5.7 mm2 and 34.5 +/- 4.4 mm2, respectively). Mean ultimate tensile stress values of unconditioned patellar ligaments were significantly larger than those values of unconditioned quadriceps tendons: 53.4 +/- 7.2 N/mm2 and 33.6 +/- 8.1 N/mm2, respectively. Strain at failure was 14.4% +/- 3.3% for preconditioned patellar ligaments and 11.2% +/- 2.2% for preconditioned quadriceps tendons (P = 0.0428). Preconditioned patellar ligaments exhibited significantly higher elastic modulus than preconditioned quadriceps tendons. Based on mechanical tensile properties analyses, the quadriceps tendon-bone construct may represent a versatile alternative graft in primary and revision anterior and posterior cruciate ligament reconstruction.
Preconditioning of soft tissues has become a common procedure in tensile testing to assess the history dependence of these viscoelastic materials. To our knowledge, this is the first study comparing tensile properties of soft tissues-before and after cyclic preconditioning with high loads. Sixteen quadriceps tendon-bone (QT-B) complexes and 16 patellar ligament-bone (PL-B) complexes from a young population (mean age 24.9 +/- 4.4 years) were loaded to failure with a deformation rate of 1 mm/s. Half of the QT-B and the PL-B complexes underwent 200 uniaxial preconditioning cycles from 75 to 800 N at 0.5 Hz before ultimate failure loading. High-load preconditioning was made possible by the development of a highly reliable and easy-to-use cryofixation device to attach the free tendon end. PL-B complexes were more influenced by preconditioning than the QT-B complexes. Ultimate failure load, stiffness at 200 N and stiffness at 800 N were significantly higher for PL-B complexes after preconditioning, while the structural properties of QT-B complexes exhibited no significant alterations. The values of the mechanical properties like Young's modulus at 200 N and 800 N were much higher for both preconditioned specimen groups. In addition, ultimate stress was augmented by preconditioning for PL-B complexes. Hysteresis and creep effects were highest during the first few loading cycles. More than 160 cycles were needed to reach a steady state. Beyond 160 cycles there was no further creep, and hysteresis was almost constant. Creep values were 2.2% of the initial testing length for the QT-B and 3.2% of the initial testing length for the PL-B complexes. The effect of cyclic preconditioning seems to be caused by progressive fiber recruitment and by alterations of the interstitial fluid milieu.
Structural tensile properties analyses of 10-mm-wide central sections of quadriceps tendon-bone (QT-B) and bone-patellar ligament (B-PL) complexes from young male donors (mean age 24.9 years, range 19-32 years) were complemented by a cryosectional analysis: each QT-B complex was composed of the segment of the quadriceps tendon with the proximal half of the patella attached, each B-PL complex was composed of the distal half of the patella with the patellar ligament attached. A servohydraulic materials testing machine was used to assess ultimate failure load of 16 unconditioned and 16 preconditioned QT-B and B-PL complexes at an extension rate of 1 mm/s. Ligaments/tendons were preconditioned during 200 cycles from 50 to 800 N at 0.5 Hz. On cryosections the quadriceps tendons were significantly longer and thicker and exhibited a significantly larger bony attachment area than the patellar ligaments. Cross-sectional areas of 10-mm-wide, full-thickness, central parts of unconditioned quadriceps tendons were significantly greater and measured 64.6 +/- 8.4 mm2 with respect to the cross-sectional area of patellar ligaments, measuring 36.8 +/- 5.7 mm2 (P < 0.0025). Ultimate failure loads for unconditioned complexes resulted at 2173 +/- 618 N for QT-B complexes and at 1953 +/- 325 N for B-PL complexes (P = 0.43). Ultimate failure load values measured 2353 +/- 495 N for preconditioned QT-B complexes and 2376 +/- 152 N for preconditioned B-PL complexes, respectively (P = 0.77). Despite the fact that initial testing length, thickness, cross-sectional shape and area of unconditioned QT-B and B-PL complexes were significantly different, displacement at ultimate load, energy to failure and total energy were not. In terms of ultimate tensile strength, the 10-mm-wide central part of the QT-B complex compared favourably to the tensile properties of the human femur-anterior cruciate ligament-tibia complex from a comparable young age group. The evidence from anatomic, cryosectional and structural properties analyses suggests that the QT-B complex may be a valuable and versatile adjunct to the surgeon's armamentarium in reconstructive cruciate ligament surgery.
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