Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, McKay Orthopaedic Research Laboratory, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States.
J Appl Physiol (1985). 2024 Jan 1;136(1):43-52. doi: 10.1152/japplphysiol.00720.2023. Epub 2023 Nov 16.
Tendon injury and healing involve intricate changes to tissue metabolism, biology, and inflammation. Current techniques often require animal euthanasia or tissue destruction, limiting assessment of dynamic changes in tendon, including treatment response, disease development, rupture risk, and healing progression. Microdialysis, a minimally invasive technique, offers potential for longitudinal assessment, yet it has not been applied to rat tendon models. Therefore, the objective of this study is to adapt a novel application of an in vivo assay, microdialysis, using acute injury as a model for extreme disruption of the tendon homeostasis. We hypothesize that microdialysis will be able to detect measurable differences in the healing responses of acute injury with high specificity and sensitivity. Overall results suggest that microdialysis is a promising in vivo technique for longitudinal assessment for this system with strong correlations between extracellular fluid (ECF) and dialysate concentrations and reasonable recovery rates considering the limitations of this model. Strong positive correlations were found between dialysate and extracellular fluid (ECF) concentration for each target molecule of interest including metabolites, inflammatory mediators, and collagen synthesis and degradation byproducts. These results suggest that microdialysis is capable of detecting changes in tendon healing following acute tendon injury with high specificity and sensitivity. In summary, this is the first study to apply microdialysis to a rat tendon model and assess its efficacy as a direct measurement of tendon metabolism, biology, and inflammation. This study adapts a novel application of microdialysis to rat tendon models, offering a minimally invasive avenue for longitudinal tendon assessment. Successfully detecting changes in tendon healing after acute injury, it showcases strong correlations between extracellular fluid and dialysate concentrations. The results highlight the potential of microdialysis as a direct measure of tendon metabolism, biology, and inflammation, bypassing the need for animal euthanasia and tissue destruction.
肌腱损伤和愈合涉及组织代谢、生物学和炎症的复杂变化。目前的技术通常需要对动物进行安乐死或组织破坏,限制了对肌腱的动态变化,包括治疗反应、疾病发展、破裂风险和愈合进展的评估。微透析是一种微创技术,具有进行纵向评估的潜力,但尚未应用于大鼠肌腱模型。因此,本研究的目的是适应一种新的应用,即微透析,将急性损伤作为一种极端破坏肌腱内稳态的模型。我们假设微透析将能够以高特异性和灵敏度检测急性损伤愈合反应中的可测量差异。总体结果表明,微透析是一种有前途的体内技术,可用于对该系统进行纵向评估,与细胞外液(ECF)和透析液浓度之间具有很强的相关性,并且考虑到该模型的局限性,回收率合理。在每个感兴趣的靶分子(包括代谢物、炎症介质以及胶原合成和降解的副产物)中,都发现了透析液和细胞外液(ECF)浓度之间的强正相关。这些结果表明,微透析能够以高特异性和灵敏度检测急性肌腱损伤后肌腱愈合的变化。总之,这是首次将微透析应用于大鼠肌腱模型,并评估其作为肌腱代谢、生物学和炎症的直接测量方法的效果。本研究将微透析的新应用应用于大鼠肌腱模型,为肌腱的纵向评估提供了一种微创途径。成功检测到急性损伤后肌腱愈合的变化,显示了细胞外液和透析液浓度之间的强相关性。这些结果突出了微透析作为肌腱代谢、生物学和炎症的直接测量方法的潜力,避免了对动物安乐死和组织破坏的需要。