The reason we call it tendinopathy is the actual structure of the tissue changes. With tendinitis it's simply inflammation of the tendon, which doesn't cause significant tissue formation changes. With tendinopathy that inflammation has been in there long enough where the actual cellular matrix no longer has the same composition (spaghetti example). The cellular matrix's fiber's are no longer oriented in a north/south pattern, it turns into a jumbled mess and it's unhealthy tissue that has a failure point significantly lower than that of completely healthy tissue. Crazy part is a lot of times tendinitis and tendinopathy don't have any pain associated with it; which is why sometimes people just tear out of nowhere with no previous pain or discomfort.Thanks for the advice. I met with my surgeon this week actually and he used the word “creep” describing what you did. I’m a metallurgical engineer so matrix, deformation, phase transitions etc make good sense to me. If you want to get more scientific go for it!
Update on the hunt, I stayed near the truck the whole time and did end up shooting a doe. I missed two different bucks so the leg didn’t necessarily hold me back at all. Get my boot off next week and PT is ramping up a little faster now so I’m stoked! A year from now I can’t wait to hit hunting season again like a normal person!
Glad to hear you got out there and got something done. Next fall you likely won't notice that tendon much; occasional stiffness and it probably won't feel quite as strong as your other one but nothing that should hold you back!