Paper Review: Do Male & Female Tendons Heal Differently?
The Run Smarter Podcast - En podcast av Brodie Sharpe - Söndagar
Learn more about Brodie's Research Database & AI Assistant đđFor MORE Run Smarter Resources đââïžđ- Including Free Injury Prevention Courses đ©čđ- The Run Smarter Book đ- Access to Research Papers đđ- & Ways to Work with Brodie đ€đđ CLICK HERE! đâšđ§ Episode SummaryIn this episode, Brodie dives into a newly published paper titled âFemale Tendons are from Venus and Male Tendons are from Mars: But Does it Matter for Tendon Health?â by Gerard McMahon and Jill Cook. The paper explores how male and female tendons differ in structure, adaptation, healing, and injury riskâand what it means for those dealing with tendinopathy.đ What Youâll LearnKey structural differences between male and female tendons (size, stiffness, collagen synthesis)Why female tendons may stretch more but adapt less to trainingHow men and women respond differently to tendon rehab protocolsSurprising findings about pain, healing, and tendon blood flowWhether injury prevention or rehab should differ based on sexđ Key TakeawaysFemale tendons are more compliant, have lower stiffness, and show slower collagen productionâeven at rest.Male tendons respond more favorably to traditional rehab (like eccentric loading), often reporting greater pain reduction and functional improvements.Despite men experiencing more frequent tendon injuries in some data, women may be closer to their strain âdanger zoneâ during exercise, possibly increasing injury risk.Women may need longer rehab timelines, heavier resistance training (beyond just eccentrics), and closer attention to recovery, nutrition, and hormonal cycles.Men should be cautious about overloading tendons due to higher force-generating capacity and should still progress gradually.đĄ For Runners With TendinopathyDonât compare your progress to someone of the opposite sexârecovery is sex-specific.Trust the process: healing may be happening at a microscopic level even if pain relief is slow.Tailor your rehab by considering not just gender, but also age, training history, injury severity, and more.
