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This project will investigate patellar tendon tissue (transmission electron microscopy of structure and protein analyses) coupled with magnetic resonance imaging (1.5T and 7T) from persons with i) chronic patellar tendinopathy (CT), ii) the earliest possible signs and symptoms of patellar tendinopathy (ET), and iii) symptom free controls (CTRL)(matched for age and physical activity/sports participation).
The investigators hypothesize that 7T MRI will be able to detect more subtle changes in early tendinopathy as compared to 3T MRI, thereby taking advantage of the increased spatial resolution that can be obtained in MRI with higher field strength. Further the investigator hypothesise that alterations in the tissue will be more pronounced in the CT group compared to ET and healthy controls.
Full description
Tendon tissue plays an essential role in transmitting contractile forces to bone to produce movement and is therefore uniquely designed to withstand considerable loads (up to ~8 times body weight) during human locomotion. Yet, repetitive use often results in overuse injuries such as tendinopathies, which is a common clinical condition characterized by pain during activity, localized tenderness upon palpation, swelling of the tendon and impaired performance. Tendinopathy is a sizeable problem in both elite and recreational athletes. In fact, the incidence of tendon injuries has been estimated to be as high as 30-50% of all sports injuries, and 50% of elite endurance runners, and 6% of sedentary people will at some point experience a tendon injury. Moreover, the symptoms and reduction in performance may be quite protracted and last for years. To date the ability to detect the early onset of the disease, and thus to prevent it from becoming chronic and debilitating, remains an enigma and the investigators wish to bridge this gap in knowledge by studying patellar tendon tissue samples coupled with magnetic resonance imaging (3T and 7T)
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Common for all groups
ET - group
Symptom onset within 90 days at inclusion
Clinical signs of patellar tendinopathy.
Activity related pain in the patellar tendon.
Palpation pain in the proximal part of the patellar tendon.
At least one of the following three changes on the ultrasound scanning:
CT - group,
Symptom onset >90 days ago
Clinical signs of patellar tendinopathy.
Activity related pain in the patellar tendon.
Palpation pain in the proximal part of the patellar tendon.
At least one of the following three changes on the ultrasound scanning:
CTRL - group - Similar activity level as the two patient groups.
Exclusion criteria
Common for all groups
Previous surgery in the knee on the ipsilateral side.
Previous corticosteroid injection in the patellar tendon on the ipsilateral side.
Smoking
Known arthritis
Known diabetes
Known hypercholesterolemia
Previous injections in the ipsilateral tendon.
MRI contraindications
ET - group
CTRL - group
45 participants in 3 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Nikolaj Malmgaard-Clausen, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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