Achilles Tendon Rupture Clinical Trial
Official title:
Healing of Human Achilles Tendon Rupture: Loading Pattern After Surgical Repair to Achieve Optimal Mechanical Properties and Clinical Outcome
The overall aim of this project is to investigate the healing processes of human tendon after suturing a ruptured Achilles tendon, and more specifically to determine the optimal loading pattern of the tendon during the rehabilitation period to ensure complete and good recovery of tendon structure and function. The investigators hypothesize that restricting early weight bearing and only allowing for passive stretching in the early phase of tendon healing will ensure better tissue regeneration and thereby prevent chronic tendon elongation and improve tendon tissue recovery and the clinical outcome.
Surgical repair of Achilles tendon ruptures is known to significantly reduce the risk of
re-rupture and to accelerate the time to return to activity compared with non-surgical
treatments (1, 2). Although sutured, Achilles tendon rupture requires an extended
rehabilitation period following surgery to function normally again. However, the currently
available information on this post-operative treatment suggest that the currently available
rehabilitation guidelines, which includes early weight bearing, does not accomplish optimal
recovery of muscle-tendon function. It has been demonstrated that reduced capacity to
perform heel-rises, diminished range of motion of the ankle joint, and reduced calf muscle
mass is correlated with a delay in return to activity, and all of these factors could be
related to elongation of the healing tendon (3). Importantly, it appears that preventing
tendon elongation during rehabilitation improves the clinical outcome, but the actual
mechanism for the elongation and thus how to prevent it remains unknown (4). With newly
developed techniques in our laboratory we will determine the mechanical properties of human
whole Achilles tendon, in vivo, which makes it possible to explore how tendons respond to
the regimes following a suture repair and rehabilitation regime.
In contrast to the current rehabilitation regime after tendon surgery, which includes early
high loading (weight bearing) already in the first weeks after surgery, we hypothesize that
avoiding early weight bearing but allowing for early passive ankle joint range of motion
(tissue strain with minimal loading) will prevent chronic tendon elongation, increase tendon
stiffness, increase calf strength and muscle volume/thickness, and thus improve the
long-term clinical outcome after tendon rupture in humans.
Patients with acute Achilles tendon ruptures will undergo a standardized suture repair (a.m.
Kessler) using resorbable suture (Vicryl size 1) at Bispebjerg Hospital and be placed in a
brace that inhibits ankle joint movement. During surgery, patients will get four tantalum
beads with a diameter of 1.0 mm implanted with a venflon needle in the proximal and the
distal stub of the tendon. Thereafter they will be randomized to three post-operative
treatment regimes:
Control, range of motion or immobilized
From the currently available data (4, 5, 6) it is suggested that the brace is worn for 6
weeks after surgery in all three groups of the present experiment. The control group will be
allowed partial weight-bearing from day 0 and full weight-bearing from week 4, toe rises
after 16 weeks, jogging after 24 weeks and return to sports 34 weeks after. The two delayed
weight-bearing groups (range motion group and immobilized group) will be restricted
completely from weight-bearing initially (6 weeks), allowed partial weight-bearing after 6
weeks and full weight-bearing after 8 weeks.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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