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Oral Ibuprofen Interferes with Cellular Healing Responses in a Murine Model of Achilles Tendinopathy

BACKGROUND: The attempted healing of tendon after acute injury (overloading, partial tear or complete rupture) proceeds via the normal wound healing cascade involving hemostasis, inflammation, matrix synthesis and matrix remodeling. Depending on the degree of trauma and the nature of the post-injury...

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Autores principales: Bittermann, Adam, Gao, Shuguang, Rezvani, Sabah, Li, Jun, Sikes, Katie J, Sandy, John, Wang, Vincent, Lee, Simon, Holmes, George, Lin, Johnny, Plaas, Anna
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6347402/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30687812
http://dx.doi.org/10.23937/2572-3243.1510049
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author Bittermann, Adam
Gao, Shuguang
Rezvani, Sabah
Li, Jun
Sikes, Katie J
Sandy, John
Wang, Vincent
Lee, Simon
Holmes, George
Lin, Johnny
Plaas, Anna
author_facet Bittermann, Adam
Gao, Shuguang
Rezvani, Sabah
Li, Jun
Sikes, Katie J
Sandy, John
Wang, Vincent
Lee, Simon
Holmes, George
Lin, Johnny
Plaas, Anna
author_sort Bittermann, Adam
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The attempted healing of tendon after acute injury (overloading, partial tear or complete rupture) proceeds via the normal wound healing cascade involving hemostasis, inflammation, matrix synthesis and matrix remodeling. Depending on the degree of trauma and the nature of the post-injury milieu, a variable degree of healing and recovery of function occurs. Post-injury analgesia is often achieved with NSAIDs such as Ibuprofen, however there is increasing evidence that NSAID usage may interfere with the healing process. This study aimed to investigate the cellular mechanism by which IBU therapy might lead to a worsening of tendon pathology. METHODS: We have examined the effect of oral Ibuprofen, on Achilles tendon healing in a TGFb1-induced murine tendinopathy model. Dosing was started 3 days after initial injury (acute cellular response phase) and continued for 22 days or started at 9 days after injury (transition to matrix regeneration phase) and given for 16 days. Cellular changes in tendon and surrounding peritenon were assessed using Hematoxylin/Eosin, chondroid accumulation with Safranin O and anti-aggrecan immunohistochemistry, and neo-vessel formation with GSI Lectin histochemistry. Markers of inflammation included histochemical localization of hyaluronan, immunohistochemistry of heavy chain 1 and TNFα-stimulated glycoprotein-6 (TSG6). Cell responses were further examined by RT-qPCR of 84 NFκB target genes and 84 wound healing genes. Biomechanical properties of tendons were evaluated by tensile testing. RESULTS: At a clinically-relevant dosage, Ibuprofen prevented the process of remodeling/removal of the inflammatory matrix components, hyaluronan, HC1 and TSG6. Furthermore, the aberrant matrix remodeling was accompanied by activation at day 28 of genes (Col1a2, Col5a3, Plat, Ccl12, Itga4, Stat3, Vegfa, Mif, Col4a1, Rhoa, Relb, F8, Cxcl9, Lta, Ltb, Ccl12, Cdkn1a, Ccl22, Sele, Cd80), which were not activated at any time without the drug, and so appear most likely to be involved in the pathology. Of these, Vegfa, Col4a1, F8, Cxcl9 and Sele, have been shown to play a role in vascular remodeling, consistent with the appearance at 25 days of vasculogenic cell groups in the peritenon and fat pad stroma surrounding the Achilles of the drug-dosed mice. Tensile stiffness (p = 0.004) and elastic modulus (p = 0.012) were both decreased (relative to age-matched uninjured and non-dosed mice) in mice dosed with Ibuprofen from day 3 to day 25, whether injured or not. CONCLUSION: We conclude that the use of Ibuprofen for pain relief during inflammatory phases of tendinopathy, might interfere with the normal processes of extracellular matrix remodeling and cellular control of expression of inflammatory and wound healing genes. It is proposed that the known COX2-mediated anti-inflammatory effect of ibuprofen has detrimental effects on the turnover of a pro-inflammatory HA matrix produced in response to soft-tissue injury, thus preventing the switch to cellular responses associated with functional matrix remodeling and eventual healing.
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spelling pubmed-63474022019-01-25 Oral Ibuprofen Interferes with Cellular Healing Responses in a Murine Model of Achilles Tendinopathy Bittermann, Adam Gao, Shuguang Rezvani, Sabah Li, Jun Sikes, Katie J Sandy, John Wang, Vincent Lee, Simon Holmes, George Lin, Johnny Plaas, Anna J Musculoskelet Disord Treat Article BACKGROUND: The attempted healing of tendon after acute injury (overloading, partial tear or complete rupture) proceeds via the normal wound healing cascade involving hemostasis, inflammation, matrix synthesis and matrix remodeling. Depending on the degree of trauma and the nature of the post-injury milieu, a variable degree of healing and recovery of function occurs. Post-injury analgesia is often achieved with NSAIDs such as Ibuprofen, however there is increasing evidence that NSAID usage may interfere with the healing process. This study aimed to investigate the cellular mechanism by which IBU therapy might lead to a worsening of tendon pathology. METHODS: We have examined the effect of oral Ibuprofen, on Achilles tendon healing in a TGFb1-induced murine tendinopathy model. Dosing was started 3 days after initial injury (acute cellular response phase) and continued for 22 days or started at 9 days after injury (transition to matrix regeneration phase) and given for 16 days. Cellular changes in tendon and surrounding peritenon were assessed using Hematoxylin/Eosin, chondroid accumulation with Safranin O and anti-aggrecan immunohistochemistry, and neo-vessel formation with GSI Lectin histochemistry. Markers of inflammation included histochemical localization of hyaluronan, immunohistochemistry of heavy chain 1 and TNFα-stimulated glycoprotein-6 (TSG6). Cell responses were further examined by RT-qPCR of 84 NFκB target genes and 84 wound healing genes. Biomechanical properties of tendons were evaluated by tensile testing. RESULTS: At a clinically-relevant dosage, Ibuprofen prevented the process of remodeling/removal of the inflammatory matrix components, hyaluronan, HC1 and TSG6. Furthermore, the aberrant matrix remodeling was accompanied by activation at day 28 of genes (Col1a2, Col5a3, Plat, Ccl12, Itga4, Stat3, Vegfa, Mif, Col4a1, Rhoa, Relb, F8, Cxcl9, Lta, Ltb, Ccl12, Cdkn1a, Ccl22, Sele, Cd80), which were not activated at any time without the drug, and so appear most likely to be involved in the pathology. Of these, Vegfa, Col4a1, F8, Cxcl9 and Sele, have been shown to play a role in vascular remodeling, consistent with the appearance at 25 days of vasculogenic cell groups in the peritenon and fat pad stroma surrounding the Achilles of the drug-dosed mice. Tensile stiffness (p = 0.004) and elastic modulus (p = 0.012) were both decreased (relative to age-matched uninjured and non-dosed mice) in mice dosed with Ibuprofen from day 3 to day 25, whether injured or not. CONCLUSION: We conclude that the use of Ibuprofen for pain relief during inflammatory phases of tendinopathy, might interfere with the normal processes of extracellular matrix remodeling and cellular control of expression of inflammatory and wound healing genes. It is proposed that the known COX2-mediated anti-inflammatory effect of ibuprofen has detrimental effects on the turnover of a pro-inflammatory HA matrix produced in response to soft-tissue injury, thus preventing the switch to cellular responses associated with functional matrix remodeling and eventual healing. 2018-05-21 2018 /pmc/articles/PMC6347402/ /pubmed/30687812 http://dx.doi.org/10.23937/2572-3243.1510049 Text en This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/.
spellingShingle Article
Bittermann, Adam
Gao, Shuguang
Rezvani, Sabah
Li, Jun
Sikes, Katie J
Sandy, John
Wang, Vincent
Lee, Simon
Holmes, George
Lin, Johnny
Plaas, Anna
Oral Ibuprofen Interferes with Cellular Healing Responses in a Murine Model of Achilles Tendinopathy
title Oral Ibuprofen Interferes with Cellular Healing Responses in a Murine Model of Achilles Tendinopathy
title_full Oral Ibuprofen Interferes with Cellular Healing Responses in a Murine Model of Achilles Tendinopathy
title_fullStr Oral Ibuprofen Interferes with Cellular Healing Responses in a Murine Model of Achilles Tendinopathy
title_full_unstemmed Oral Ibuprofen Interferes with Cellular Healing Responses in a Murine Model of Achilles Tendinopathy
title_short Oral Ibuprofen Interferes with Cellular Healing Responses in a Murine Model of Achilles Tendinopathy
title_sort oral ibuprofen interferes with cellular healing responses in a murine model of achilles tendinopathy
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6347402/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30687812
http://dx.doi.org/10.23937/2572-3243.1510049
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