Morphology of proximal and distal human semitendinosus compartments and the effects of distal tendon harvesting for anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction

Author:

Kositsky Adam12ORCID,Maas Huub3ORCID,Barrett Rod S.1ORCID,Kennedy Ben14ORCID,Stenroth Lauri2ORCID,Korhonen Rami K.2ORCID,Vertullo Christopher J.15ORCID,Diamond Laura E.1ORCID,Saxby David J.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Griffith Centre of Biomedical and Rehabilitation Engineering (GCORE), Menzies Health Institute Queensland Griffith University Gold Coast Queensland Australia

2. Department of Technical Physics University of Eastern Finland Kuopio Finland

3. Department of Human Movement Sciences, Faculty of Behavioural and Movement Sciences, Amsterdam Movement Sciences Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam Amsterdam The Netherlands

4. Mermaid Beach Radiology Gold Coast Queensland Australia

5. Knee Research Australia Gold Coast Queensland Australia

Abstract

AbstractThe human semitendinosus muscle is characterized by a tendinous inscription separating proximal and distal neuromuscular compartments. As each compartment is innervated by separate nerve branches, potential exists for independent operation and control of compartments. However, the morphology and function of each compartment have not been thoroughly examined in an adult human population. Further, the distal semitendinosus tendon is typically harvested for use in anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction surgery, which induces long‐term morphological changes to the semitendinosus muscle‐tendon unit. It remains unknown if muscle morphological alterations following anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction are uniform between proximal and distal semitendinosus compartments. Here, we performed magnetic resonance imaging on 10 individuals who had undergone anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction involving an ipsilateral distal semitendinosus tendon graft 14 ± 4 months prior, extracting morphological parameters of the whole semitendinosus muscle and each individual compartment from both the (non‐injured) contralateral and surgical legs. In the contralateral leg, volume and length of the proximal compartment were smaller than the distal compartment. No between‐compartment differences in volume or length were found for anterior cruciate ligament reconstructed legs, likely due to greater shortening of the distal compared to the proximal compartment after anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction. The maximal anatomical cross‐sectional area of both compartments was substantially smaller on the anterior cruciate ligament reconstructed leg but did not differ between compartments on either leg. The absolute and relative between‐leg differences in proximal compartment morphology on the anterior cruciate ligament reconstructed leg were strongly correlated with the corresponding between‐leg differences in distal compartment morphological parameters. Specifically, greater between‐leg morphological differences in one compartment were highly correlated with large between‐leg differences in the other compartment, and vice versa for smaller differences. These relationships indicate that despite the heterogeneity in compartment length and volume, compartment atrophy is not independent or random. Further, the tendinous inscription endpoints were generally positioned at the same proximodistal level as the compartment maximal anatomical cross‐sectional areas, providing a wide area over which the tendinous inscription could mechanically interact with compartments. Overall, results suggest the two human semitendinosus compartments are not mechanically independent.

Funder

Academy of Finland

Griffith University

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cell Biology,Developmental Biology,Molecular Biology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Histology,Anatomy

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