This article refers to permanent shortening of muscles, tendons, or ligaments. For contracture of the muscle specifically, see
Muscle contracture. For short-term contraction of muscles that occurs during exercise, see
Muscle contraction.
In
pathology, a contracture is a shortening of
muscles, tendons, skin, and nearby soft tissues that causes the
joints to shorten and become very stiff, preventing normal movement.[1][2] A contracture is usually permanent, but less commonly can be temporary (such as in
McArdle disease),[3] or resolve over time but reoccur later in life (such as in
Bethlem myopathy 1).[4]
It is usually in response to prolonged
hypertonicspasticity in a concentrated muscle area, such as is seen in the tightest muscles of people with conditions like
spastic cerebral palsy, but can also be due to the congenital abnormal development of muscles and connective tissue in the womb.
Contractures develop usually when normally elastic tissues such as muscles or tendons are replaced by inelastic tissues (
fibrosis). This results in the shortening and hardening of these tissues, ultimately causing rigidity, joint deformities and a total loss of movement around the joint.
Most of the
physical therapy,
occupational therapy and other exercise regimens targeted towards people with
spasticity focuses on trying to prevent contractures from happening in the first place. However, research on sustained traction of connective tissue in approaches such as adaptive yoga has demonstrated that contracture can be reduced,[5] at the same time that tendency toward spasticity is addressed.
Muscle injury leading to
adhesions and
fibrosis (internal scarring). Fibrosis occurs within a muscle or organ, whereas adhesions bind two separate tissues or organs together.
In response to impending muscle damage associated with ATP (energy) deficiency,
Congenital abnormalities of muscle development.
Skin contracture
Wound contraction, where the edges of the skin are pulled together to close the wound, is a normal part of
wound healing. However, large wounds and abnormal wound healing cause skin contractures by excessively tightening the skin and limiting movement.[6][7][8] A skin contracture due to a burn is known as a
burn scar contracture.
Large areas of missing skin (such as large burns, grazes, and gouges) drastically reduce the area of skin causing it to become tight when pulled together during wound healing.[6][7] Scars initially lack elasticity with synthesis of elastic tissue fibres (
elastogenesis) being a function of duration and site of the scar.[9] Deep wounds and abnormal wound healing causes abnormal scarring such as
hypertrophic scars.[8] Studies on hypertrophic scars have shown a lack of improvement to both elasticity and stiffness suggesting a prolonged healing phase without amelioration seen in a normal wound-healing curve.[10][11]
Surgery can help alleviate skin contractures in the form of skin grafts and removal of hypertrophic scars.[8][6] For hypertrophic scars, timing is important when considering surgery, as over time scars will mature and may show decreased contractures along with flattening, softening, and repigmentation without surgical intervention.[8]