Abstract

The deleterious impact of concomitant muscle injury on fracture healing and limb function is commonly considered part of the natural sequela of orthopedic trauma. Recent reports suggest that heightened inflammation in the surrounding traumatized musculature is a primary determinant of fracture healing. Relatedly, there are emerging potential therapeutic approaches for severe muscle trauma (e.g., volumetric muscle loss [VML] injury), such as autologous minced muscle grafts (1 mm3 pieces of muscle; GRAFT), that can partially prevent chronic functional deficits and appear to have an immunomodulatory effect within VML injured muscle. The primary goal of this study was to determine if repair of VML injury with GRAFT rescues impaired fracture healing and improves the strength of the traumatized muscle in a male Lewis rat model of tibia open fracture. The most salient findings of the study were: (1) tibialis anterior (TA) muscle repair with GRAFT improved endogenous healing of fractured tibia and improved the functional outcome of muscle regeneration; (2) GRAFT repair attenuated the monocyte/macrophage (CD45+ CDllb+) and T lymphocyte (CD3+) response to VML injury; (3) TA muscle protein concentrations of MCP1, IL‐10, and IGF‐1 were augmented in a proregenerative manner by GRAFT repair; (4) VML injury concomitant with osteotomy induced a heightened systemic presence of alarmins (e.g., soluble RAGE) and leukocytes (e.g., monocytes), and depressed IGF‐1 concentration, which GRAFT repair ameliorated. Collectively, these data indicate that repair of VML injury with a regenerative therapy can modulate the inflammatory and regenerative phenotype of the treated muscle and in association improve musculoskeletal healing.

Highlights

  • Volumetric muscle loss (VML) injuries occur frequently in civilian and military orthopedic trauma

  • Physiological Reports published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of The Physiological Society and the American Physiological Society

  • Graft repair of VML injury significantly improved bone formation compared to OST + VML to levels similar to OST-only (Table 2; Fig. 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Volumetric muscle loss (VML) injuries occur frequently in civilian and military orthopedic trauma This destructive form of injury results in a permanent loss of muscle tissue and strength (Corona et al 2016), heightened and prolonged muscle inflammation (Hurtgen et al 2016; Sadtler et al 2016), extensive compartmental fibrosis (Garg et al 2014a), loss of range of motion (Garg et al 2015), disrupted intrinsic muscle properties (Corona et al 2013a; Garg et al 2015), and gross limb dysfunction (Garg et al 2015).

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