The purpose of this study was to determine the effects of elbow joint angle on mechanical properties, as represented by ultimate
load, failure strain and elastic modulus, of bone-tendon specimens of common extensor tendon of the humeral epicondyle. Eight
pairs of specimens were equally divided into two groups of 8 each, which selected arbitrarily from left or right side of each
pair, positioned at 45° and 90° of elbow flexion and subjected to tension to failure in the physiological direction of the
common extensor tendon. For comparison of the differences in the failure and elastic modulus between tendon and the bone-junction,
data for both were evaluated individually. Significant reduction in ultimate load of bone-tendon specimens was shown to occur
at 45°. The values obtained from the bone-tendon junctions with regard to the failure strain were significant higher than
those from tendon in both loading directions, but the largest failure strain at the bone-tendon junction was found at 45°.
The elastic modulus was found to decrease significantly at the bone-tendon junction when the loading direction switched from
90° to 45°. Histological observation, after mechanical tensile tests, in both loading directions showed that failure occurred
at the interface between tendon and uncalcified fibrocartilage in the thinnest fibrocartilage zone of the bone-tendon junction.
We concluded that differences in measured mechanical properties are a consequence of varying the loading direction of the
tendon across the bone-tendon specimen.
Key Words Mechanical Properties - Common Extensor Tendon - Histological Observation - Fibrocartilage