“…However, musculoskeletal tissues, tendons and nerves included, are often smaller than the wavelength, heterogeneous, anisotropic, and display a combination of elastic and viscous properties 45 and thus, could decrease the validity of elasticity measurements. Specific to the application in nerves, probe orientation might affect elasticity values, 46 exhibit boundary artefacts to their limited dimensions 47 (due to wave reflections at the nerve boundaries and acoustic impedance mismatching) and close proximity to highly reflecting structures such as tendons, bones, and ligaments 43,48 . Despite these confounding factors, it has been shown in tendons that the elastic modulus can still be used as an objective indicator of relative tissue elasticity as long as comparisons are done between similar tissue types, under similar conditions 49,50 ; for nerves, this is currently less known 4 …”