Department of Biomedical Sciences, University of New England College of Osteopathic Medicine, Biddeford, ME, United States.
Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, Lewis Katz School of Medicine, Temple University, Philadelphia, PA, United States.
Pain. 2019 Mar;160(3):632-644. doi: 10.1097/j.pain.0000000000001443.
Painful and disabling musculoskeletal disorders remain prevalent. In rats trained to perform repetitive tasks leading to signs and dysfunction similar to those in humans, we tested whether manual therapy would prevent the development of the pathologies and symptoms. We collected behavioral, electrophysiological, and histological data from control rats, rats that trained for 5 weeks before performing a high-repetition high-force (HRHF) task for 3 weeks untreated, and trained rats that performed the task for 3 weeks while being treated 3x/week using modeled manual therapy (MMT) to the forearm (HRHF + MMT). The MMT included bilateral mobilization, skin rolling, and long axis stretching of the entire upper limb. High-repetition high-force rats showed decreased performance of the operant HRHF task and increased discomfort-related behaviors, starting after training. HRHF + MMT rats showed improved task performance and decreased discomfort-related behaviors compared with untreated HRHF rats. Subsets of rats were assayed for presence or absence of ongoing activity in C neurons and slow Aδ neurons in their median nerves. Neurons from HRHF rats had a heightened proportion of ongoing activity and altered conduction velocities compared with control and MMT-treated rats. Median nerve branches in HRHF rats contained increased numbers of CD68 macrophages and degraded myelin basic protein, and showed increased extraneural collagen deposition, compared with the other groups. We conclude that the performance of the task for 3 weeks leads to increased ongoing activity in nociceptors, in parallel with behavioral and histological signs of neuritis and nerve injury, and that these pathophysiologies are largely prevented by MMT.
疼痛和致残性肌肉骨骼疾病仍然普遍存在。在经过训练执行重复性任务的大鼠身上,这些任务会导致类似于人类的症状和功能障碍,我们测试了手法治疗是否可以预防这些病理变化和症状的发生。我们从对照组大鼠、训练 5 周后未经处理进行 3 周高重复高强度(HRHF)任务的大鼠以及接受模拟手法治疗(MMT)治疗的大鼠中收集了行为、电生理和组织学数据,这些大鼠在进行 3 周 HRHF 任务的同时每周接受 3 次治疗。MMT 包括前臂双侧松动、皮肤滚动和整个上肢长轴拉伸。高重复高强度大鼠在训练后表现出操作性 HRHF 任务表现下降和不适感相关行为增加。与未经治疗的 HRHF 大鼠相比,接受 MMT 治疗的 HRHF 大鼠表现出任务表现改善和不适感相关行为减少。部分大鼠进行了检测,以确定其正中神经 C 神经元和慢 Aδ 神经元是否存在持续活动。与对照组和 MMT 治疗组相比,HRHF 大鼠的神经元持续活动比例较高,传导速度改变。与其他组相比,HRHF 大鼠的正中神经分支含有更多的 CD68 巨噬细胞和降解的髓鞘碱性蛋白,并且表现出更多的神经外胶原沉积。我们得出结论,进行 3 周的任务会导致伤害感受器的持续活动增加,与神经炎和神经损伤的行为和组织学迹象平行,而这些病理生理变化在很大程度上可以通过 MMT 预防。