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Summary HUB3006F - Connective Tissue - Collins

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This document focuses on the biochemical structure of tendons, tendon injuries, and the properties of connective tissues. It details the types of musculoskeletal connective tissue, including tendons, ligaments, bones, cartilage, and muscle connective tissues, and explains the importance of connective tissue in preventing diseases and managing musculoskeletal injuries.   The notes cover the structure and function of tendons, the factors contributing to tendon injuries, and the characteristics of chronic tendinopathy. It also discusses the viscoelastic properties of tendons and ligaments, including hysteresis, rate dependence, load relaxation, and creep, and explains the tendon stress-strain curve.   Furthermore, the document delves into the composition of tendons, collagen structure, and the role of glycoproteins, proteoglycans, and tenocytes in connective tissue.

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Uploaded on
April 19, 2025
Number of pages
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Written in
2024/2025
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Summary

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Co#ective Ti+ue

Biochemical Structure of Tendons
TENDON INJURIES AND PROPERTIES

Types of musculoskeletal connective tissue
• Tendons – connects muscle to bone
• Ligaments – connect bone to bone
o Tendons and ligaments have very similar properties and structure, but different functions
• Bones
• Cartilage
• Epimysium, perimysium and endomysium in skeletal muscle


Intramuscular connective tissue
• White layer surrounding each cell = endomysium
• Cannot see the epimysium
• Under scanning electron microscope, cells removed > connective tissue remaining


Why is connective tissue important?
• Increased risk of non-communicable disease in sedentary individuals
• Use physical activity in the prevention of disease, maintenance of health and treatment =
rehabilitation
• Sporting excellence and injury prevention for elite and recreational athletes


Musculoskeletal injuries
• Musculoskeletal tissue = bones, tendons, ligaments, muscles
• Commonly injured as a result of PA and work-related activities (repetitive movements)


(1) Acute onset injuries – result of a single macro-traumatic event, resulting in tissue injury
o Tissue is acutely overloaded and fails
(2) Chronic injuries (overuse) – tissue eventually becomes painful when subjected to multiple
repetitive stresses that it is not able to withstand
o Initially unaware of tissue damage
o Microscopic damage – important for adaptation but if not treated properly it can grow in
volume and become symptomatic e.g. pain
o Accumulation of micro-traumatic events


Tendons
• Connect muscle to bone
• Transmit force emanating from muscle to bone to generate movement
• Other functions:
o Store elastic energy – stored energy propels individual for subsequent movement
o Serve as an articulating surface
o Can form part of the pulley system
• Muscle contraction = shortening ® tendon stretched, storing potential energy

,• Shows resistance to mechanical loads e.g. Achilles tendon has to withstand 10x our body weight
Tendon has two specific structures:
• Myotendinous junction (MTJ) – the point of union with muscle
o Sarcolemma of muscle is folded, increase SA for tendon to join the muscle
o Subjected to great mechanical stress during transmission of muscular contractile force to
the tendon
• Osteotendinous junction (OTJ) – the point of union with bone
o tendon to cartilage to bone
o enthesis – the insertion of a tendon, ligament, capsule or fascia into bone


• Most musculoskeletal tissue conditions are multi-factorial – there is not a single cause
• Many factors increase the risk for injuries
• Often do not understand these causes, rather address risk factors
• Intrinsic factors – biomechanics, sex, flexibility, anatomical variations, genetics, age,
anthropometry, previous injury
• Extrinsic factors – medications, nutrition, environmental conditions, equipment, physical activity,
training errors


Pathogenesis – risk and management
Determining the risk, diagnosis, clinical management and therapeutic interventions should be based on
a solid understanding of underlying biological mechanisms that cause injury


• Limited knowledge of the biological mechanisms, more research required
• Affect ability to accurately diagnose + clinical management


Chronic tendinopathy
• Collagen (protein fibre – main proteins found in tendons
o Arranged in highly ordered structure parallel to one another
• (a) normal flexor tendon histology
• (c) accumulation of GAG (blue) surrounded rounded cells in the
matrix
o Ground substance
o Formation of new blood vessels that should not be there
o Irreversible


NOTE: REFER TO ‘STRUCUTURE AND METABOLISM OF TENDONS’, O’BRIEN

, Viscous, elastic, and viscoelastic properties


Viscous material • E.g. honey
• Does not stretch when a force is applied to the material
• Flows like liquid
• Material does not return to its original shape when the force is
removed
• Friction due to sliding


Elastic material • Stretched when a force is applied to the material
• Returns to its original length when the force is removed
• Energy storage and return


Viscoelastic material • Elastic and viscous components
• When force is applied:
o Spring properties stretches first
o Viscous properties will then start to flow
o Spring will gradually return to its original shape
• History dependent mechanics – what happens when the force is
removed depends on its current and prior load
• Tendons and ligaments are highly viscoelastic


Features of Viscoelastic behaviour


1. Hysteresis – the dependence of a state of a system on its history
• Loading (up) and unloading (down) curves are different
• Something getting longer with an increasing loading
o As you pull (increase load), approached maximum elongation
• Grey region = energy lost
o When release, tendon goes back to normal but not through
the same load
o Less energy can be used to return the material back to normal
• As one loads and unloads a tendon, some energy is lost as heat
• Greater hysteresis = greater energy lost as heat = less energy can be recoiled to propel
movement


2. Rate dependence
• Material behaves differently depending on the load you apply to the tissue
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