| Literature DB >> 26973517 |
Antonio Frizziero1, Francesca Salamanna2, Elena Della Bella3, Filippo Vittadini1, Giuseppe Gasparre1, Nicolò Nicoli Aldini4, Stefano Masiero1, Milena Fini4.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Several conditions such as training, aging, estrogen deficiency and drugs could affect the biological and anatomo-physiological characteristics of the tendon. Additionally, recent preclinical and clinical studies examined the effect of detraining on tendon, showing alterations in its structure and morphology and in tenocyte mechanobiology. However, few data evaluated the importance that cessation of training might have on tendon. Basically, we do not fully understand how tendons react to a phase of training followed by sudden detraining. Therefore, within this review, we summarize the studies where tendon detraining was examined.Entities:
Keywords: detraining; sudden detraining; systematic literature review; tendon; tenocyte
Year: 2016 PMID: 26973517 PMCID: PMC4770795 DOI: 10.3389/fnagi.2016.00043
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Aging Neurosci ISSN: 1663-4365 Impact factor: 5.750
Figure 1Literature search strategy and criteria.
Preclinical studies on role of detraining in tendon mechanobiology.
| Experimental | Type of tendon | Control group | Training protocol | Detraining protocol | Analysis | Main results | Referenceset-up |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rat patellar tendon tenocyte | Untrained patellar tendon tenocyte Trained patellar tendon tenocyte | 10 week on a treadmill (~65–70% VO2max) | Caged without exercise for 4 weeks | Transmission- electronic- microscopy, C-terminal- propeptide of type I collagen, collagen III, fibronectin, aggrecan, tenascin-c, interleukin-1β, matrix- metalloproteinase-1 and-3 | Altered tenocyte synthetic and metabolic activity | Salamanna et al. ( | |
| Chicken gastrocnemius tendon | No control group | 3 week on a treadmill (speed of 0.22 m/s, for 5 min) | Controls or immobilized for 2 weeks | Tendon midregion cross-sectional area and biomechanical properties | Gastrocnemius tendon responds to mechanical disuse as predicted by the mechanobiology process | Foutz et al. ( | |
| Rat patellar tendon | Untrained patellar tendon Trained patellar tendon | 10 week on a treadmill (~60% VO2max) | Caged without exercise for 4 weeks | Collagen fiber organization and proteoglycan content | Low proteoglycan content and collagen fiber organization | Frizziero et al. ( | |
| Rat patellar tendon | Untrained patellar tendon Trained patellar tendon | 10 week on a treadmill (~65–70% VO2max) | Caged without exercise for 4 weeks | Structure and morphology (modified Movin score, tear density, collagen type I and III) | Altered structure and morphology with the highest Movin score values, the highest percentage of collagen III and the lowest of collagen I | Frizziero et al. ( |
Clinical studies on role of detraining in tendon mechanobiology.
| Type of tendon | Patients | Training protocol | Detraining protocol | Analysis | Main results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patellar tendon | 8 (training group); 6 (control group) | Unilateral isometric knee extension, 4 times/week, 3 months | Return to usual levels of physical activity, 3 months | - Tendon elongation by ultrasounds; - Cross-sectional areaby MRI | Greater values of tendon elongation, decrease in tendon stiffness during detraining | Kubo et al. ( |
| Achilles tendon | 9 (training group); 7 (control group) | Unilateral (left side) isometric plantar flexion exercise, 4 times/week, 3 months | Return to usual levels of physical activity, 3 months | - Tendon elongation by ultrasounds; - Cross-sectional areaby MRI; - Blood supply and oxygen saturation; - Serum concentration of BAP and P1P by ELISA | Tendon elongation increased and stiffness rapidly decreased after detraining | Kubo et al. ( |
| Patellar tendon | 10 (training with the MTC at a shortened position); 11 (MTC at a lengthened position); 11 (wide range of motion); 10 (control group) | Resistance training, 3 times/week 8 weeks | 4 weeks of detraining | - Patella moment arm by DEXA; - Tendon elongation and stiffness by ultrasounds; - Circulating TGF-β1 levels by ELISA | No significant alterations in patella tendon dimensions or circulating TGF-β1 levels following training or detraining in any of the groups | McMahon et al. ( |
| Achilles tendon | 10 (training on inclined ground); 10 (training on plain ground) | Plyometric training | 4 weeks of detraining | Aponeurosis strain of MG | Strain was decreased from 22.7% (±0.05) to 16.3% (±0.05) after detraining period | Kannas et al. ( |