Calcific Tendinitis Is Mainly Associated with Basic Calcium Phosphate Deposition, but Rare Cases of Calcium Pyrophosphate Can Occur
Jannes Anton Knop, Andrea Schwab, Nicole Märtens, Christian Wybrandski, Sina Stücker, Agnieszka Halm-Pozniak, Alexander Berth, Christoph H. Lohmann, Jessica BertrandCalcific tendinitis (CT) is a condition that most commonly affects the rotator cuff tendons of the shoulder joint. Fundamental crystal morphology and composition underlying different radiological stages of CT remained insufficiently characterized. We collected human tendon samples from 33 patients with CT and 12 control patients. CT patients exhibited an increased incidence of comorbidities, especially high blood pressure and disorders of fat metabolism. Based on the Gärtner classification, calcific deposits were classified as type I in two patients, type II in 14 patients, and type III in 17 patients. Tendon calcification of the controls was significantly lower compared to the CT group. No differences in the amount of histological calcification between the Gärtner groups were observed. A correlation between the radiological size of calcification and the amount of calcification detected in histology was found. SEM-EDS and Raman identified basic calcium phosphate to be the predominant crystal type in tendons from CT patients, with only two calcium pyrophosphate detections. CT is mainly associated with BCP deposition. Calcified depot size was associated with pain intensity, while diabetes mellitus was observed more frequently in CT patients than in controls. BCP may be a focus of future mechanistic studies on CT.