Chapter 70: Muscle and Tendon Disorders Flashcards
Where do muscle strains most commonly occur?
At the musculoskeletal junction
Name the 3 stages of muscle strain (overstretching)?
- Stage 1: Myositis and bruising but architecture intact
- Stage 2: Myositis and some tearing of fascial sheath
- Stage 3: Tearing of fascial sheath, muscle fiber disruption and hematoma formation
What are the two types of tendons?
Paratenon lined (vascular) (gastroc, triceps insertions)
sheathed tendons (avascular) (digital flexor tendons)
At 6 weeks post repair, a tendon has what % of it’s original strength?
56%
At one year post repair a tendon has what % of its original strength?
79%
Name three patterns of sutures for repairing tendons?
3 loop pulley
Locking loop
Krackow
3LP has increased resistance to pull-out
3LP better for round tendon, others for flat tendons
Muscle injuries are common but rarely cause clinical issues, what are two exceptions?
Specific injuries in athletic dogs
Injuries that lead to muscle contracture
What is different between muscle injuries and tendon injuries?
Tendon injuries commonly present with serious clinical signs.
What are the three classifications of muscle injury?
Contusion (blunt injury)
Strain (overstretching, most common)
Lacerations (sharp injuries - trauma from cuts, sharp fractures or iatrogenic)
How does muscle healing occur?
Direct regeneration of myofibrils and formation of scar tissue
The fastest healing is through day 14, then it slows
Any gap in tendon reapposition heals as what?
scar tissue
How does healing differ between paratenon-lined and sheathed tendons?
Paratenons are vascular and can send in vascular buds to tendon - better chance for rapids healing
Sheathed need to depend on inrinsic blood supply
What occurs during the first 4-5 days after tendon repair?
What needs to happen in the first 3 weeks, after 3 weeks?
The tendon ends lose holding power, then gradually increase over the next 2 weeks
Sutures must entirely resist any gap formation for 3 weeks
After 3 weeks, need normal loading for correct alignment of collagen as heals ***normal daily forces only require 25-33% of tendon capacity
The pictured tendon suture that looks like a shamrock is which pattern?
Kessler or locking loop
This is the most versatile suture
The transverse part must pass superficial to the longitudinal to grab bundles of tendon fibers
The pictured tendon suture with the knot off to the side is which pattern?
Three loop pulley.
It is best suited for round tendons.
The diagram is numbered for the order of needle passage (there are 6)