Rooney Sarah Ilkhanipour, Baskin Rachel, Torino Daniel J, Vafa Rameen P, Khandekar Pooja S, Kuntz Andrew F, Soslowsky Louis J
McKay Orthopaedic Research Laboratory, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
McKay Orthopaedic Research Laboratory, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
Am J Sports Med. 2016 Sep;44(9):2237-45. doi: 10.1177/0363546516646377. Epub 2016 Jun 8.
Previous studies have shown that ibuprofen is detrimental to tissue healing after acute injury; however, the effects of ibuprofen when combined with noninjurious exercise are debated.
Administration of ibuprofen to rats undergoing a noninjurious treadmill exercise protocol will abolish the beneficial adaptations found with exercise but will have no effect on sedentary muscle and tendon properties.
Controlled laboratory study.
A total of 167 male Sprague-Dawley rats were divided into exercise or cage activity (sedentary) groups and acute (a single bout of exercise followed by 24 hours of rest) and chronic (2 or 8 weeks of repeated exercise) response times. Half of the rats were administered ibuprofen to investigate the effects of this drug over time when combined with different activity levels (exercise and sedentary). Supraspinatus tendons were used for mechanical testing and histologic assessment (organization, cell shape, cellularity), and supraspinatus muscles were used for morphologic (fiber cross-sectional area, centrally nucleated fibers) and fiber type analysis.
Chronic intake of ibuprofen did not impair supraspinatus tendon organization or mechanical adaptations (stiffness, modulus, maximum load, maximum stress, dynamic modulus, or viscoelastic properties) to exercise. Tendon mechanical properties were not diminished and in some instances increased with ibuprofen. In contrast, total supraspinatus muscle fiber cross-sectional area decreased with ibuprofen at chronic response times, and some fiber type-specific changes were detected.
Chronic administration of ibuprofen does not impair supraspinatus tendon mechanical properties in a rat model of exercise but does decrease supraspinatus muscle fiber cross-sectional area. This fundamental study adds to the growing literature on the effects of ibuprofen on musculoskeletal tissues and provides a solid foundation on which future work can build.
The study findings suggest that ibuprofen does not detrimentally affect regulation of supraspinatus tendon adaptations to exercise but does decrease muscle growth. Individuals should be advised on the risk of decreased muscle hypertrophy when consuming ibuprofen.
先前的研究表明,布洛芬对急性损伤后的组织愈合有害;然而,布洛芬与非损伤性运动联合使用时的效果存在争议。
给进行非损伤性跑步机运动方案的大鼠服用布洛芬,将消除运动所带来的有益适应性变化,但对久坐不动的肌肉和肌腱特性没有影响。
对照实验室研究。
总共167只雄性斯普拉格-道利大鼠被分为运动组或笼内活动(久坐不动)组,并分为急性(单次运动后休息24小时)和慢性(2或8周重复运动)反应时间组。一半的大鼠服用布洛芬,以研究该药物与不同活动水平(运动和久坐不动)联合使用时随时间的影响。使用冈上肌腱进行力学测试和组织学评估(组织结构、细胞形状、细胞密度),使用冈上肌进行形态学(纤维横截面积、中央有核纤维)和纤维类型分析。
长期摄入布洛芬不会损害冈上肌腱组织或运动引起的力学适应性变化(刚度、模量、最大负荷、最大应力动模量或粘弹性特性)。肌腱力学性能没有降低,在某些情况下,布洛芬会使其增加。相比之下,在慢性反应时间时,长期服用布洛芬会使冈上肌总纤维横截面积减小,并检测到一些纤维类型特异性变化。
在大鼠运动模型中,长期服用布洛芬不会损害冈上肌腱的力学性能,但会减小冈上肌纤维横截面积。这项基础研究为布洛芬对肌肉骨骼组织影响的文献增添了内容,并为未来的研究奠定了坚实基础。
研究结果表明,布洛芬不会对冈上肌腱运动适应性调节产生不利影响,但会减少肌肉生长。应告知个体服用布洛芬时肌肉肥大减少的风险。