Effects of cryotherapy on the regeneration process and muscular mechanical properties after lacerative injury model.
Daniela Pacheco Dos Santos HaupenthalGustavo de Bem SilveiraRubya Pereira ZaccaronMaria Eduarda Anastácio Borges CorrêaPriscila Soares de SouzaMário Cesar Búrigo FilhoLaura de Roch CasagrandeMariana de Melo CardosoFlávia Karine RigoAlessandro HaupenthalPaulo Cesar Lock SilveiraPublished in: Scandinavian journal of medicine & science in sports (2020)
Cryotherapy is a therapeutic modality widely used for the treatment of muscle injuries to control pain and inflammatory processes. This study aimed to investigate the effects of cryotherapy on the inflammatory and oxidative stress parameters and mechanical properties of, and pain in, the skeletal muscles of rats with lacerative muscle injury. The rats were anesthetized with 4% isoflurane and subjected to gastrocnemius muscle laceration injury. After injury, all animals in the intervention groups received cryotherapy treatment for 20 minutes using plastic bags containing crushed ice. The protocol comprised three daily applications at 3-hour intervals on the day of injury, with reapplication 24 hours later. Seventy-two male Wistar rats were divided into three groups: sham, muscle injury (MI), and MI + cryotherapy (MI + cryo). Muscle mechanical properties were analyzed by mechanical tensile testing on day 7 after injury. The MI + cryo group showed reduced TNF-α, IFN-γ, and IL1β levels; elevated IL4, IL6, and IL10 levels; reduced oxidant production and carbonyl levels; and elevated sulfhydryl contents. Animals that underwent tissue cooling showed superoxide dismutase activity and glutathione levels close to those of the animals in the sham group. The MI and MI + cryo groups showed reduced values of the evaluated mechanical properties and lower mechanical thresholds compared to those of the animals from the sham group. Our results demonstrated that the proposed cryotherapy protocol reduced the inflammatory process and controlled oxidative stress but did not reverse the changes in the mechanical properties of muscle tissues or provide analgesic effects within the time frame analyzed.
Keyphrases
- oxidative stress
- skeletal muscle
- randomized controlled trial
- high resolution
- stem cells
- chronic pain
- neuropathic pain
- blood pressure
- dna damage
- physical activity
- spinal cord injury
- hydrogen peroxide
- gene expression
- spinal cord
- nitric oxide
- mass spectrometry
- double blind
- body composition
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- induced apoptosis
- heat shock