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The impact of different exercise protocols on rat soleus muscle reinnervation and recovery following peripheral nerve lesion and regeneration

Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2022
Abstract:
Background: Incomplete functional recovery following traumatic peripheral nerve injury is common, mainly because not all axons successfully regenerate and reinnervate target muscles. Exercise can improve functional outcomes increasing the terminal sprouting during the muscle reinnervation. However, exercise is not a panacea per se. Indeed, the type of exercise adopted dramatically impacts the outcomes of rehabilitation therapy. To gain insight into the therapeutic effects of different exercise regimens on reinnervation following traumatic nerve lesion, we evaluated the impact of different clinically transferable exercise protocols (EPs) on metabolic and functional muscle recovery following nerve crush. Methods: The reinnervation of soleus muscle in adult nerve-crushed rats was studied following 6 days of different patterns (continuous or intermittent) and intensities (slow, mid, and fast) of treadmill running EPs. The effects of EPs on muscle fiber multiple innervation, contractile properties, metabolic adaptations, atrophy, and autophagy were assessed using functional and biochemical approaches. Results: Results showed that an intermittent mid-intensity treadmill EP improves soleus muscle reinnervation, whereas a slow continuous running EP worsens the functional outcome. However, the mid-intensity intermittent EP neither enhanced the critical mediators of exercise-induced metabolic adaptations, namely, PGC-1α, nor improved muscle atrophy. Conversely, the autophagy-related marker LC3 increased exclusively in the mid-intensity intermittent EP group. Conclusion: Our results demonstrated that an EP characterized by a mid-intensity intermittent activity enhances the functional muscle recovery upon a nerve crush, thus representing a promising clinically transferable exercise paradigm to improve recovery in humans following peripheral nerve injuries.
Tipologia CRIS:
1.1 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
autophagy; exercise; motor recovery; muscle reinnervation; peripheral nerve lesion; terminal axon sprouting
Elenco autori:
Di Palma, Michael; Ambrogini, Patrizia; Lattanzi, Davide; Brocca, Lorenza; Bottinelli, Roberto; Cuppini, Riccardo; Pellegrino, Maria A; Sartini, Stefano
Autori di Ateneo:
BOTTINELLI ROBERTO
BROCCA LORENZA
PELLEGRINO MARIA ANTONIETTA
Link alla scheda completa:
https://iris.unipv.it/handle/11571/1465792
Pubblicato in:
FRONTIERS IN PHYSIOLOGY
Journal
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URL

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9485563/pdf/fphys-13-948985.pdf
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