Exercise and angiotensin receptor blockade enhance recovery after orthopaedic trauma in mice by decreasing pain and improving muscle regeneration
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Abstract
ABSTRACT Chronic pain and disability after limb injury are major public health problems. One key obstacle to addressing these adverse outcomes is that we do not know when exercise should be initiated or whether the beneficial effects of exercise can be reproduced using pharmacological tools. In these studies, we developed and used a murine model of orthopaedic trauma combining tibia fracture and pin fixation with tibialis anterior muscle damage. Behavioral measures included mechanical nociceptive thresholds and distances run on exercise wheels. Bone healing was quantified using microCT scanning, and muscle fiber size distribution as well as fibrosis were followed using immunohistochemistry. We found that the model provided robust mechanical allodynia, fibrosis and a shift to smaller average muscle fiber size lasting up to 5 weeks from injury. We also observed that allowing “late” (weeks 1-2) rather than “early” (weeks 0-1) wheel running after injury resulted in greater overall running activity and greater reversal of allodynia. In parallel, the late running paradigm was also associated with lower levels of muscle fibrosis and a return towards normal muscle fiber diameters. Providing the anti-fibrotic angiotensin receptor blocker losartan to mice in drinking water blocked TGFbeta production while reducing both allodynia and muscle fibrosis. Combining losartan and late exercise provided no additional benefit. We conclude that early healing after orthopaedic trauma must be allowed prior to the initiation of exercise to achieve optimal pain, functional and physiological outcomes. Losartan may provide many of the same pain, functional and physiological outcomes by its regulation of TGFbeta signaling and is a viable candidate for translational studies. Key points summary Our tibial fracture orthopaedic injury model in mice recapitulates the major manifestations of complex trauma including nociceptive sensitization, bone fracture, muscle fibrosis and muscle fiber loss. Delayed exercise after complex orthopaedic trauma results in decreased muscle fibrosis and improved pain Losartan, an angiotensin-receptor blocker with antifibrotic abilities, recapitulates the effect of exercise on post-injury recovery
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