For athletes and weekend
warriors alike, returning from a tendon injury too soon often ensures a trip
right back to physical therapy. However, a new technology developed by
University of Wisconsin-Madison engineers could one day help tell whether your
tendons are ready for action. A team of researchers led by UW-Madison
mechanical engineering professor Darryl Thelen and graduate student Jack Martin
has devised a new approach for noninvasively measuring tendon tension while a
person is engaging in activities like walking or running. This advance could
provide new insights into the motor control and mechanics of human movement. It
also could apply to fields ranging from orthopedics, rehabilitation, ergonomics
and sports. The researchers described their approach in a paper published today
(April 23, 2018) in the journal Nature
Communications.
Muscles generate movement
at joints by pulling on tendons,
which are bands of tissue that connect muscles to the skeleton. But assessing
the forces transmitted by tendons inside the body of a living person is tricky.
"Currently, wearables can measure our movement, but do not provide
information on the muscle forces that generate the movement," says Thelen,
whose work is supported by the National Institutes of Health.
To overcome this challenge,
Thelen and his collaborators developed a simple, noninvasive device that can be
easily mounted on the skin over a tendon. The device enables the researchers to
assess tendon force by looking at how the
vibrational characteristics of the tendon change when it undergoes loading, as
it does during movement.
This phenomenon is similar
to a guitar string, where the tension in the string changes the vibrational
response. When a guitar string is plucked, the speed of the wave traveling
along the string, and thus the vibration frequency, is related to the tension,
or force, applied to the string. "We've found a way to measure the
vibrational characteristics—in this case, the speed of a shear wave traveling
along a tendon—and then we went further and determined how we can interpret
this measurement to find the tensile stress within the tendon," Thelen
says.
The new system for
measuring wave speed is portable and relatively inexpensive. It includes a
mechanical device that lightly taps the tendon 50 times per second. Each tap
initiates a wave in the tendon, and two miniature accelerometers determine how
quickly it travels.
The researchers have used
the device to measure forces on the Achilles tendon, as well as the patellar
and hamstring tendons. In each case, they can measure what happens in the
tendon when users modify their gait—for example, by changing step length or
speed. By measuring how muscles and tendons behave within the human body, this
system could eventually enable clinicians to plan more effective treatments for
patients suffering from musculoskeletal diseases and injuries.
"We think the
potential of this new technology is high, both from a basic
science standpoint and for clinical applications," Thelen says. "For
example, tendon force measures could be used to guide treatments of individuals
with gait disorders. It may also be useful to objectively assess when a
repaired tendon is sufficiently healed to function normally and allow a person
to return to activity."
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