PURPOSE: the aim of our study was thus to quantify the effect of Platelet Rich Plasma (PRP) injection on systemic and local growth factors and to identify molecular markers in a rat model of patellar and Achilles tendinosis treated with PRP. MATERIAL AND METHOD: twenty two rats were used for the study. Two healthy rats were used as control (T-). We induced tendinosis (T+) in 20 rats (80 tendons by injecting under ultrasonography (US) guidance Collagenase 1® (day 0 = D0, patellar=40 and Achilles=40). At D3, these 20 rats with tendinosis were separated in treatment by either PRP (PRPT+, n=28), physiological serum (PST+, n=28, control) US-guided intratendinous injection, or without no PRP or PS (T+, n=24, control of natural evolution of tendinopathy). Follow-up at D7, D13, D18 and D25 using serum sample and local tendon removal with ELISA technics and comparison between the 3 groups were performed. RESULTS: during biological follow up, comparison of all serum samples of PRPT+, PST+ and T+ groups showed no significant modification of their biological markers at D7, D13, D18 and D25 (p>0.22). Comparison of immunological sample tendon markers of PRPT+, PST+ and T+ groups also showed no significant modification of markers at D7, D13, D18 and D25 (p>0.16) considering each biological marker and also all subgroups confounded. CONCLUSION: our study strongly suggests that a single intratendinous US-guided injection of PRP in Achilles and patellar T+ doesn't increase biological markers such as growth factors compared to a control group in mid-term and long-term follow-up.
PURPOSE: the aim of our study was thus to quantify the effect of Platelet Rich Plasma (PRP) injection on systemic and local growth factors and to identify molecular markers in a rat model of patellar and Achilles tendinosis treated with PRP. MATERIAL AND METHOD: twenty two rats were used for the study. Two healthy rats were used as control (T-). We induced tendinosis (T+) in 20 rats (80 tendons by injecting under ultrasonography (US) guidance Collagenase 1® (day 0 = D0, patellar=40 and Achilles=40). At D3, these 20 rats with tendinosis were separated in treatment by either PRP (PRPT+, n=28), physiological serum (PST+, n=28, control) US-guided intratendinous injection, or without no PRP or PS (T+, n=24, control of natural evolution of tendinopathy). Follow-up at D7, D13, D18 and D25 using serum sample and local tendon removal with ELISA technics and comparison between the 3 groups were performed. RESULTS: during biological follow up, comparison of all serum samples of PRPT+, PST+ and T+ groups showed no significant modification of their biological markers at D7, D13, D18 and D25 (p>0.22). Comparison of immunological sample tendon markers of PRPT+, PST+ and T+ groups also showed no significant modification of markers at D7, D13, D18 and D25 (p>0.16) considering each biological marker and also all subgroups confounded. CONCLUSION: our study strongly suggests that a single intratendinous US-guided injection of PRP in Achilles and patellar T+ doesn't increase biological markers such as growth factors compared to a control group in mid-term and long-term follow-up.
Authors: Benjamin Dallaudière; Marta Lempicki; Lionel Pesquer; Liliane Louedec; Pierre Marie Preux; Philippe Meyer; Vincent Hummel; Ahmed Larbi; Lydia Deschamps; Clement Journe; Agathe Hess; Alain Silvestre; Paul Sargos; Philippe Loriaut; Patrick Boyer; Elisabeth Schouman-Claeys; Jean Baptiste Michel; Jean Michel Serfaty Journal: Eur Radiol Date: 2013-06-26 Impact factor: 5.315
Authors: Jason L Dragoo; Hillary J Braun; Jennah L Durham; Bethany A Ridley; Justin I Odegaard; Richard Luong; Steven P Arnoczky Journal: Am J Sports Med Date: 2012-04-10 Impact factor: 6.202
Authors: David M Dohan Ehrenfest; Isabel Andia; Matthias A Zumstein; Chang-Qing Zhang; Nelson R Pinto; Tomasz Bielecki Journal: Muscles Ligaments Tendons J Date: 2014-05-08