| Literature DB >> 27548063 |
Carlotta Perucca Orfei1,2, Arianna B Lovati3, Marco Viganò1,4, Deborah Stanco1, Marta Bottagisio3,5, Alessia Di Giancamillo6, Stefania Setti7, Laura de Girolamo1.
Abstract
Tendinopathy is a big burden in clinics and it represents 45% of musculoskeletal lesions. Despite the relevant social impact, both pathogenesis and development of the tendinopathy are still under-investigated, thus limiting the therapeutic advancement in this field. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the dose-dependent and time-related tissue-level changes occurring in a collagenase-induced tendinopathy in rat Achilles tendons, in order to establish a standardized model for future pre-clinical studies. With this purpose, 40 Sprague Dawley rats were randomly divided into two groups, treated by injecting collagenase type I within the Achilles tendon at 1 mg/mL (low dose) or 3 mg/mL (high dose). Tendon explants were histologically evaluated at 3, 7, 15, 30 and 45 days. Our results revealed that both the collagenase doses induced a disorganization of collagen fibers and increased the number of rounded resident cells. In particular, the high dose treatment determined a greater neovascularization and fatty degeneration with respect to the lower dose. These changes were found to be time-dependent and to resemble the features of human tendinopathy. Indeed, in our series, the acute phase occurred from day 3 to day 15, and then progressed towards the proliferative phase from day 30 to day 45 displaying a degenerative appearance associated with a very precocious and mild remodeling process. The model represents a good balance between similarity with histological features of human tendinopathy and feasibility, in terms of tendon size to create lesions and costs when compared to other animal models. Moreover, this model could contribute to improve the knowledge in this field, and it could be useful to properly design further pre-clinical studies to test innovative treatments for tendinopathy.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27548063 PMCID: PMC4993508 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0161590
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Surgical approach.
A) Longitudinal incision of the skin in the medial portion of the hind limb. B) Achilles tendon exposure by blunt dissection. C) Injection of collagenase type I within the Achilles tendon structure.
Fig 2Histologic appearance of S-CTRL tendons at different time points.
Representative micrographs of the histopathological analysis; H&E staining. Scale bars 200 μm (10X).
Fig 3Histological appearance of CTRL, LD and HD-treated tendons at different time points.
Representative micrographs of the histopathological analysis, H&E staining. Black arrows indicate fatty deposits; White Arrows: representative zone with high cellularity; *: vessels. Scale bars 200 μm (10X).
Fig 4Histological scores.
Total (A) and specific scores for fiber arrangement (B), cell density (C) and morphology (D), presence of inflammatory cells (E), neoangiogenesis (F) and fatty deposition (G). Data are reported as mean±SD. *p<0.05 respect CTRL; $p<0.05respect to HD; #p<0.05 respect to different time point; n = 4.