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Early Resistance Rehabilitation Improves Functional Regeneration Following Segmental Bone Defect Injury

Mechanical loading is integral to bone development and repair. The application of mechanical loads through rehabilitation are regularly prescribed as a clinical aide following severe bone injuries. However, current rehabilitation regimens typically involve long periods of non-loading and rely on sub...

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Autores principales: Williams, Kylie E., Andraca Harrer, Julia, LaBelle, Steven A., Leguineche, Kelly, Kaiser, Jarred, Karipott, Salil, Lin, Angela, Vongphachanh, Alyssa, Fulton, Travis, Rosenthal, J. Walker, Muhib, Farhan, Ong, Keat Ghee, Weiss, Jeffrey A., Willett, Nick J., Guldberg, Robert E.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Journal Experts 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10602073/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37886569
http://dx.doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-3236150/v1
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author Williams, Kylie E.
Andraca Harrer, Julia
LaBelle, Steven A.
Leguineche, Kelly
Kaiser, Jarred
Karipott, Salil
Lin, Angela
Vongphachanh, Alyssa
Fulton, Travis
Rosenthal, J. Walker
Muhib, Farhan
Ong, Keat Ghee
Weiss, Jeffrey A.
Willett, Nick J.
Guldberg, Robert E.
author_facet Williams, Kylie E.
Andraca Harrer, Julia
LaBelle, Steven A.
Leguineche, Kelly
Kaiser, Jarred
Karipott, Salil
Lin, Angela
Vongphachanh, Alyssa
Fulton, Travis
Rosenthal, J. Walker
Muhib, Farhan
Ong, Keat Ghee
Weiss, Jeffrey A.
Willett, Nick J.
Guldberg, Robert E.
author_sort Williams, Kylie E.
collection PubMed
description Mechanical loading is integral to bone development and repair. The application of mechanical loads through rehabilitation are regularly prescribed as a clinical aide following severe bone injuries. However, current rehabilitation regimens typically involve long periods of non-loading and rely on subjective patient feedback, leading to muscle atrophy and soft tissue fibrosis. While many pre-clinical studies have focused on unloading, ambulatory loading, or direct mechanical compression, rehabilitation intensity and its impact on the local strain environment and subsequent bone healing have largely not been investigated. This study combines implantable strain sensors and subject-specific finite element models in a pre-clinical rodent model with a defect size on the cusp of critically-sized. Animals were enrolled in either high or low intensity rehabilitation one week post injury to investigate how rehabilitation intensity affects the local mechanical environment and subsequent functional bone regeneration. The high intensity rehabilitation animals were given free access to running wheels with resistance, which increased local strains within the regenerative niche by an average of 44% compared to the low intensity (no-resistance) group. Finite element modeling demonstrated that resistance rehabilitation significantly increased compressive strain by a factor of 2.0 at week 1 and 4.45 after 4 weeks of rehabilitation. The resistance rehabilitation group had significantly increased regenerated bone volume and higher bone bridging rates than its sedentary counterpart (bone volume: 22.00 mm(3) ± 4.26 resistance rehabilitation vs 8.00 mm(3) ± 2.27 sedentary; bridging rates: 90% resistance rehabilitation vs 50% sedentary). In addition, animals that underwent resistance running had femurs with improved mechanical properties compared to those left in sedentary conditions, with failure torque and torsional stiffness values matching their contralateral, intact femurs (stiffness: 0.036 Nm/deg ± 0.006 resistance rehabilitation vs 0.008 Nm/deg ± 0.006 sedentary). Running on a wheel with no resistance rehabilitation also increased bridging rates (100% no resistance rehabilitation vs 50% sedentary). Analysis of bone volume and von Frey suggest no-resistance rehabilitation may improve bone regeneration and hindlimb functionality. These results demonstrate the potential for early resistance rehabilitation as a rehabilitation regimen to improve bone regeneration and functional recovery.
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spelling pubmed-106020732023-10-27 Early Resistance Rehabilitation Improves Functional Regeneration Following Segmental Bone Defect Injury Williams, Kylie E. Andraca Harrer, Julia LaBelle, Steven A. Leguineche, Kelly Kaiser, Jarred Karipott, Salil Lin, Angela Vongphachanh, Alyssa Fulton, Travis Rosenthal, J. Walker Muhib, Farhan Ong, Keat Ghee Weiss, Jeffrey A. Willett, Nick J. Guldberg, Robert E. Res Sq Article Mechanical loading is integral to bone development and repair. The application of mechanical loads through rehabilitation are regularly prescribed as a clinical aide following severe bone injuries. However, current rehabilitation regimens typically involve long periods of non-loading and rely on subjective patient feedback, leading to muscle atrophy and soft tissue fibrosis. While many pre-clinical studies have focused on unloading, ambulatory loading, or direct mechanical compression, rehabilitation intensity and its impact on the local strain environment and subsequent bone healing have largely not been investigated. This study combines implantable strain sensors and subject-specific finite element models in a pre-clinical rodent model with a defect size on the cusp of critically-sized. Animals were enrolled in either high or low intensity rehabilitation one week post injury to investigate how rehabilitation intensity affects the local mechanical environment and subsequent functional bone regeneration. The high intensity rehabilitation animals were given free access to running wheels with resistance, which increased local strains within the regenerative niche by an average of 44% compared to the low intensity (no-resistance) group. Finite element modeling demonstrated that resistance rehabilitation significantly increased compressive strain by a factor of 2.0 at week 1 and 4.45 after 4 weeks of rehabilitation. The resistance rehabilitation group had significantly increased regenerated bone volume and higher bone bridging rates than its sedentary counterpart (bone volume: 22.00 mm(3) ± 4.26 resistance rehabilitation vs 8.00 mm(3) ± 2.27 sedentary; bridging rates: 90% resistance rehabilitation vs 50% sedentary). In addition, animals that underwent resistance running had femurs with improved mechanical properties compared to those left in sedentary conditions, with failure torque and torsional stiffness values matching their contralateral, intact femurs (stiffness: 0.036 Nm/deg ± 0.006 resistance rehabilitation vs 0.008 Nm/deg ± 0.006 sedentary). Running on a wheel with no resistance rehabilitation also increased bridging rates (100% no resistance rehabilitation vs 50% sedentary). Analysis of bone volume and von Frey suggest no-resistance rehabilitation may improve bone regeneration and hindlimb functionality. These results demonstrate the potential for early resistance rehabilitation as a rehabilitation regimen to improve bone regeneration and functional recovery. American Journal Experts 2023-10-04 /pmc/articles/PMC10602073/ /pubmed/37886569 http://dx.doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-3236150/v1 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which allows reusers to distribute, remix, adapt, and build upon the material in any medium or format, so long as attribution is given to the creator. The license allows for commercial use. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/License:This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.Read Full License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Article
Williams, Kylie E.
Andraca Harrer, Julia
LaBelle, Steven A.
Leguineche, Kelly
Kaiser, Jarred
Karipott, Salil
Lin, Angela
Vongphachanh, Alyssa
Fulton, Travis
Rosenthal, J. Walker
Muhib, Farhan
Ong, Keat Ghee
Weiss, Jeffrey A.
Willett, Nick J.
Guldberg, Robert E.
Early Resistance Rehabilitation Improves Functional Regeneration Following Segmental Bone Defect Injury
title Early Resistance Rehabilitation Improves Functional Regeneration Following Segmental Bone Defect Injury
title_full Early Resistance Rehabilitation Improves Functional Regeneration Following Segmental Bone Defect Injury
title_fullStr Early Resistance Rehabilitation Improves Functional Regeneration Following Segmental Bone Defect Injury
title_full_unstemmed Early Resistance Rehabilitation Improves Functional Regeneration Following Segmental Bone Defect Injury
title_short Early Resistance Rehabilitation Improves Functional Regeneration Following Segmental Bone Defect Injury
title_sort early resistance rehabilitation improves functional regeneration following segmental bone defect injury
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10602073/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37886569
http://dx.doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-3236150/v1
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