BACKGROUND:Anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injuries and reconstruction (ACLR) promote quadriceps muscle atrophy and weakness that can persist for years, suggesting the need for more effective rehabilitation programs. Whether neuromuscular electrical stimulation (NMES) can be used to prevent maladaptations in skeletal muscle size and function is unclear. PURPOSE: To examine whether early NMES use, started soon after an injury and maintained through 3 weeks after surgery, can preserve quadriceps muscle size and contractile function at the cellular (ie, fiber) level in the injured versus noninjured leg of patients undergoing ACLR. STUDY DESIGN: Randomized controlled trial; Level of evidence, 1. METHODS:Patients (n = 25; 12 men/13 women) with an acute, first-time ACL rupture were randomized to NMES (5 d/wk) or sham (simulated microcurrent electrical nerve stimulation; 5 d/wk) treatment to the quadriceps muscles of their injured leg. Bilateral biopsies of the vastus lateralis were performed 3 weeks after surgery to measure skeletal muscle fiber size and contractility. Quadriceps muscle size and strength were assessed 6 months after surgery. RESULTS: A total of 21 patients (9 men/12 women) completed the trial. ACLR reduced single muscle fiber size and contractility across all fiber types (P < .01 to P < .001) in the injured compared with noninjured leg 3 weeks after surgery. NMES reduced muscle fiber atrophy (P < .01) through effects on fast-twitch myosin heavy chain (MHC) II fibers (P < .01 to P < .001). NMES preserved contractility in slow-twitch MHC I fibers (P < .01 to P < .001), increasing maximal contractile velocity (P < .01) and preserving power output (P < .01), but not in MHC II fibers. Differences in whole muscle strength between groups were not discerned 6 months after surgery. CONCLUSION: Early NMES use reduced skeletal muscle fiber atrophy in MHC II fibers and preserved contractility in MHC I fibers. These results provide seminal, cellular-level data demonstrating the utility of the early use of NMES to beneficially modify skeletal muscle maladaptations to ACLR. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Our results provide the first comprehensive, cellular-level evidence to show that the early use of NMES mitigates early skeletal muscle maladaptations to ACLR. REGISTRATION: NCT02945553 (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier).
RCT Entities:
BACKGROUND:Anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injuries and reconstruction (ACLR) promote quadriceps muscle atrophy and weakness that can persist for years, suggesting the need for more effective rehabilitation programs. Whether neuromuscular electrical stimulation (NMES) can be used to prevent maladaptations in skeletal muscle size and function is unclear. PURPOSE: To examine whether early NMES use, started soon after an injury and maintained through 3 weeks after surgery, can preserve quadriceps muscle size and contractile function at the cellular (ie, fiber) level in the injured versus noninjured leg of patients undergoing ACLR. STUDY DESIGN: Randomized controlled trial; Level of evidence, 1. METHODS:Patients (n = 25; 12 men/13 women) with an acute, first-time ACL rupture were randomized to NMES (5 d/wk) or sham (simulated microcurrent electrical nerve stimulation; 5 d/wk) treatment to the quadriceps muscles of their injured leg. Bilateral biopsies of the vastus lateralis were performed 3 weeks after surgery to measure skeletal muscle fiber size and contractility. Quadriceps muscle size and strength were assessed 6 months after surgery. RESULTS: A total of 21 patients (9 men/12 women) completed the trial. ACLR reduced single muscle fiber size and contractility across all fiber types (P < .01 to P < .001) in the injured compared with noninjured leg 3 weeks after surgery. NMES reduced muscle fiber atrophy (P < .01) through effects on fast-twitch myosin heavy chain (MHC) II fibers (P < .01 to P < .001). NMES preserved contractility in slow-twitch MHC I fibers (P < .01 to P < .001), increasing maximal contractile velocity (P < .01) and preserving power output (P < .01), but not in MHC II fibers. Differences in whole muscle strength between groups were not discerned 6 months after surgery. CONCLUSION: Early NMES use reduced skeletal muscle fiber atrophy in MHC II fibers and preserved contractility in MHC I fibers. These results provide seminal, cellular-level data demonstrating the utility of the early use of NMES to beneficially modify skeletal muscle maladaptations to ACLR. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Our results provide the first comprehensive, cellular-level evidence to show that the early use of NMES mitigates early skeletal muscle maladaptations to ACLR. REGISTRATION: NCT02945553 (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier).
Authors: Bruce D Beynnon; Robert J Johnson; Shelly Naud; Braden C Fleming; Joseph A Abate; Bjarne Brattbakk; Claude E Nichols Journal: Am J Sports Med Date: 2011-09-27 Impact factor: 6.202
Authors: Brian Noehren; Anders Andersen; Peter Hardy; Darren L Johnson; Mary Lloyd Ireland; Katherine L Thompson; Bruce Damon Journal: J Bone Joint Surg Am Date: 2016-09-21 Impact factor: 5.284
Authors: J J Irrgang; A F Anderson; A L Boland; C D Harner; M Kurosaka; P Neyret; J C Richmond; K D Shelborne Journal: Am J Sports Med Date: 2001 Sep-Oct Impact factor: 6.202
Authors: M L Dirks; B T Wall; T Snijders; C L P Ottenbros; L B Verdijk; L J C van Loon Journal: Acta Physiol (Oxf) Date: 2013-12-12 Impact factor: 6.311
Authors: Stephanie C Petterson; Ryan L Mizner; Jennifer E Stevens; Leo Raisis; Alex Bodenstab; William Newcomb; Lynn Snyder-Mackler Journal: Arthritis Rheum Date: 2009-02-15
Authors: Damien M Callahan; Mark S Miller; Andrew P Sweeny; Timothy W Tourville; James R Slauterbeck; Patrick D Savage; David W Maugan; Philip A Ades; Bruce D Beynnon; Michael J Toth Journal: J Physiol Date: 2014-07-18 Impact factor: 5.182
Authors: Mark S Miller; Peter Vanburen; Martin M Lewinter; Stewart H Lecker; Donald E Selby; Bradley M Palmer; David W Maughan; Philip A Ades; Michael J Toth Journal: Circ Heart Fail Date: 2009-09-24 Impact factor: 8.790
Authors: Damien M Callahan; Timothy W Tourville; James R Slauterbeck; Philip A Ades; Jennifer Stevens-Lapsley; Bruce D Beynnon; Michael J Toth Journal: Exp Gerontol Date: 2015-09-03 Impact factor: 4.032
Authors: Timothy W Tourville; Kathleen M Jarrell; Shelly Naud; James R Slauterbeck; Robert J Johnson; Bruce D Beynnon Journal: Am J Sports Med Date: 2013-11-25 Impact factor: 6.202
Authors: Caroline Lisee; Adam S Lepley; Thomas Birchmeier; Kaitlin O'Hagan; Christopher Kuenze Journal: Sports Health Date: 2019-01-14 Impact factor: 3.843
Authors: Timothy W Tourville; Thomas B Voigt; Rebecca H Choquette; Mathew J Failla; Nathan K Endres; James R Slauterbeck; Bruce D Beynnon; Michael J Toth Journal: J Orthop Res Date: 2021-06-20 Impact factor: 3.494
Authors: Charles R Badawy; Kyleen Jan; Edward C Beck; Niles Fleet; Jeffrey Taylor; Kevin Ford; Brian R Waterman Journal: Arthrosc Sports Med Rehabil Date: 2022-01-28
Authors: Alli Gokeler; Alberto Grassi; Roy Hoogeslag; Albert van Houten; Caroline Bolling; Matthew Buckthorpe; Grant Norte; Anne Benjaminse; Pieter Heuvelmans; Stefano Di Paolo; Igor Tak; Francesco Della Villa Journal: J Exp Orthop Date: 2022-07-30