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1.
Front Physiol ; 13: 801829, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35350696

ABSTRACT

The rabbit supraspinatus is a useful translational model for rotator cuff (RC) repair because it recapitulates muscle atrophy and fat accumulation observed in humans after a chronic tear (the "first hit"). However, a timeline of RC tissue response after repair, especially with regard to recent evidence of muscle degeneration and lack of regeneration, is currently unavailable. Thus, the purpose of this study was to characterize the progression of muscle and fat changes over time after the repair of a chronic RC tear in the rabbit model. Two rounds of experiments were conducted in 2017-2018 and 2019-2020 with N = 18 and 16 skeletally mature New Zealand White rabbits, respectively. Animals underwent left supraspinatus tenotomy with repair 8 weeks later. The unoperated right shoulder served as control. The rabbits were sacrificed at 1-, 2-, 4-, and 8-weeks post-repair for histological and biochemical analysis. Atrophy, measured by fiber cross-sectional area and muscle mass, was greatest around 2 weeks after repair. Active muscle degeneration peaked at the same time, involving 8% of slide areas. There was no significant regeneration at any timepoint. Fat accumulation and fibrosis were significantly increased across all time points compared to contralateral. Statement of Clinical Significance: These results demonstrate model reproducibility and a "second hit" phenomenon of repair-induced muscle atrophy and degeneration which partially recovers after a short time, while increased fat and fibrosis persist.

3.
J Appl Physiol (1985) ; 131(6): 1708-1717, 2021 12 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34647843

ABSTRACT

Chronic rotator cuff tears can cause severe functional deficits. Addressing the chronic fatty and fibrotic muscle changes is of high clinical interest; however, the architectural and physiological consequences of chronic tear and repair are poorly characterized. We present a detailed architectural and physiological analysis of chronic tear and repair (both over 8 and 16 wk) compared with age-matched control rabbit supraspinatus (SSP) muscles. Using female New Zealand White Rabbits (n = 30, n = 6/group) under 2% isoflurane anesthesia, the SSP was surgically isolated and maximum isometric force was measured at four to six muscle lengths. Architectural analysis was performed, and maximum isometric stress was computed. Whole muscle length-tension curves were generated using architectural measurements to compare experimental physiology to theoretical predictions. Architectural measures are consistent with persistent radial and longitudinal atrophy over time in tenotomy that fails to recover after repair. Maximum isometric force was significantly decreased after 16 wk tenotomy and not significantly improved after repair. Peak isometric force reported here are greater than prior reports of rabbit SSP force after tenotomy. Peak stress was not significantly different between groups and consistent with prior literature of SSP stress. Muscle strain during contraction was significantly decreased after 8 wk of tenotomy and repair, indicating effects of tear and repair on muscle function. The experimental length-tension data were overlaid with predicted curves for each experimental group (generated from structural data), exposing the altered structure-function relationship for tenotomy and repair over time. Data presented here contribute to understanding the physiological implications of disease and repair in the rotator cuff.NEW & NOTEWORTHY We utilize an established method to measure the length-tension relationship for the rabbit supraspinatus in normal, torn, and repaired muscles. We then perform architectural analysis to evaluate structural changes after tear and repair. Although peak isometric force is lower in the tear and repair groups, there are no differences in peak stresses across groups. These findings indicate persistent structural changes (both radial and longitudinal atrophy) and physiological deficiencies (decreased peak force and uncoupling structure-function relationship) after tenotomy that do not significantly recover after repair.


Subject(s)
Rotator Cuff Injuries , Rotator Cuff , Animals , Atrophy , Female , Fibrosis , Rabbits , Rotator Cuff/surgery , Rotator Cuff Injuries/pathology , Rotator Cuff Injuries/surgery , Tenotomy
4.
Front Physiol ; 12: 707116, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34421646

ABSTRACT

Rotator cuff (RC) tears are prevalent in the population above the age of 60. The disease progression leads to muscle atrophy, fibrosis, and fatty infiltration in the chronic state, which is not improved with intervention or surgical repair. This highlights the need to better understand the underlying dysfunction in muscle after RC tendon tear. Contemporary studies aimed at understanding muscle pathobiology after RC tear have considered transcriptional data in mice, rats and sheep models at 2-3 time points (1 to 16 weeks post injury). However, none of these studies observed a transition or resurgence of gene expression after the initial acute time points. In this study, we collected rabbit supraspinatus muscle tissue with high temporal resolution (1, 2, 4, 8, and 16 weeks) post-tenotomy (n = 6/group), to determine if unique, time-dependent transcriptional changes occur. RNA sequencing and analyses were performed to identify a transcriptional timeline of RC muscle changes and related morphological sequelae. At 1-week post-tenotomy, the greatest number of differentially expressed genes was observed (1,069 up/873 down) which decreases through 2 (170/133), 4 (86/41), and 8 weeks (16/18), followed by a resurgence and transition of expression at 16 weeks (1,421/293), a behavior which previously has not been captured or reported. Broadly, 1-week post-tenotomy is an acute time point with expected immune system responses, catabolism, and changes in energy metabolism, which continues into 2 weeks with less intensity and greater contribution from mitochondrial effects. Expression shifts at 4 weeks post-tenotomy to fatty acid oxidation, lipolysis, and general upregulation of adipogenesis related genes. The effects of previous weeks' transcriptional dysfunction present themselves at 8 weeks post-tenotomy with enriched DNA damage binding, aggresome activity, extracellular matrix-receptor changes, and significant expression of genes known to induce apoptosis. At 16 weeks post-tenotomy, there is a range of enriched pathways including extracellular matrix constituent binding, mitophagy, neuronal activity, immune response, and more, highlighting the chaotic nature of this time point and possibility of a chronic classification. Transcriptional activity correlated significantly with histological changes and were enriched for biologically relevant pathways such as lipid metabolism. These data provide platform for understanding the biological mechanisms of chronic muscle degeneration after RC tears.

5.
J Appl Physiol (1985) ; 129(6): 1405-1412, 2020 12 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33031015

ABSTRACT

The rotator cuff (RC) muscles are crucial in moving and stabilizing the glenohumeral joint, and tears can be functionally devastating. Chronic fatty and fibrotic muscle changes, which are nonresponsive to surgical tendon repair, are a focus of contemporary research. The rabbit model recapitulates key biological features of human RC tears, but function and physiology are poorly characterized; limited force and stress data are inconsistent with literature norms in other mammalian species. Here, we present an improved method to assess the physiology of the rabbit supraspinatus muscle (SSP), and we report values for healthy SSP architecture and physiology. Using female New Zealand White Rabbits (n = 6) under 2% isoflurane anesthesia, we surgically isolated the SSP and maximum isometric force measured at 4-6 muscle lengths. Architectural analysis was performed, and maximum isometric stress was computed. Whole muscle length-tension curves were generated using architectural measurements to compare experimental physiology to theoretical predictions. Maximum isometric force (80.87 ± 5.58 N) was dramatically greater than previous reports (11.06 and 16.1 N; P < 0.05). Architectural measurement of fiber length (34.25 ± 7.18 mm), muscle mass (9.9 ± 0.93 g), pennation angle (23.67 ± 8.32°), and PCSA (2.57 ± 0.20 cm2) were consistent with prior literature. Isometric stress (30.5 ± 3.07 N/cm2) was greater than previous reports of rabbit SSP (3.10 and 4.51 N/cm2), but similar to mammalian skeletal muscles (15.7-30.13 N/cm2). Previous studies underestimated peak force by ∼90%, which has profound implications for interpreting physiological changes as a function of disease state. The data that are presented here enable understanding the physiological implications of disease and repair in the RC of the rabbit.NEW & NOTEWORTHY We introduce an improved method to assess rabbit supraspinatus muscle physiology. Maximum isometric force measured for the rabbit supraspinatus was dramatically greater than previous reports in the literature. Consequently, the isometric contractile stress reported is almost 10 times greater than previous reports of rabbit supraspinatus, but similar to available literature of other mammalian skeletal muscle. We show that previous reports of peak supraspinatus isometric force were subphysiological by ∼90.


Subject(s)
Rotator Cuff , Shoulder Joint , Animals , Female , Isometric Contraction , Muscle Contraction , Muscle, Skeletal , Rabbits , Rotator Cuff/surgery , Tendons
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