| Literature DB >> 35518400 |
Deding Tang1,2,3, Jie Hu4, Hao Liu1,3, Zedong Li1,3, Qiang Shi1,3,5, Guoxu Zhao6, Bin Gao7, Jiatao Lou8, Chunyan Yao9, Feng Xu1,3.
Abstract
With the development of modern society, we have witnessed a significant increase of people who join in sport exercises, which also brings significantly increasing exercise-induced muscle injuries, resulting in reduction and even cessation of participation in sports and physical activities. Although severely injured muscles can hardly realize full functional restoration, skeletal muscles subjected to minor muscle injuries (e.g., tears, lacerations, and contusions) hold remarkable regeneration capacity to be healed without therapeutic interventions. However, delayed diagnosis or inappropriate prognosis will cause exacerbation of the injuries. Therefore, timely diagnosis and prognosis of muscle injuries is important to the recovery of injured muscles. Here, in this review, we discuss the definition and classification of exercise-induced muscle injuries, and then analyze their underlying mechanism. Subsequently, we provide detailed introductions to both conventional and emerging techniques for evaluation of exercise-induced muscle injuries with focus on emerging portable and wearable devices for point-of-care testing (POCT). Finally, we point out existing challenges and prospects in this field. We envision that an integrated system that combines physiological and biochemical analyses is anticipated to be realized in the future for assessing muscle injuries. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 35518400 PMCID: PMC9057463 DOI: 10.1039/d0ra07321k
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RSC Adv ISSN: 2046-2069 Impact factor: 4.036
Fig. 1Muscle injuries and mechanisms. (A) Structure of skeletal muscle;[96] (B) the muscle performance as time after exercise-induced muscle injury;[29] (C) mechanism of exercise-induced muscle injuries.[9,10]
Fig. 2Representative methods for muscle injury assessment and diagnosis. Physical examination:[97] (A) manual muscle test and (B) accurate and quantifiable assessment of a patient's muscle injury with a proper measurement tool. Imaging analysis:[98] (C) ultrasonography and (D) MRI. (E) Electromyography (EMG).[99] (F) Blood test.[100–102]
Fig. 3Portable devices for muscle injuries assessment. (A) Scheme of a lateral flow test strip.[103] (a) Structure of a test strip. (b–d) Detection process of a test strip. Adding sample (b), antigen–antibody binding (c), bindings of particles with and without antigens to test line and control line, respectively (d). (B) Photos of the i-STATs analyzer (a) and its working procedures: sampling (b) and analyzing (c)[103] (images courtesy of Abbott Point of Care Inc., NJ, USA). (C) GeneXpert test platform from Cepheid.[104] (D) Mobisante ultrasound (http://www.mobisante.com/).[16]
Fig. 4Wearable devices for muscle injuries assessment. (A) Wearable biomedical sensors.[85] (B) An automated wearable system for muscle fatigue prediction and detection.[86] (C) Wearable electronic system integrated with diagnosis unit, therapy module and data storage component: scheme (a) and digital photo (b).[87] (D) Perspiration detective: a paper-based microfluidic for measuring ion levels in sweat. Scheme (a) and digital photo (b).[105] (E) Integrated wearable circuit board with multiplexed sensors for sweat compound analysis: digital photo of wearable monitoring of a subject in cycling (a) and scheme of the sensor array (b).[106] GOx: glucose oxidase. LOx: lactate oxidase.
Fig. 5To evaluate exercise-induced muscle injuries in the future requires qualified, portable, wearable, and intelligent platforms that enable real-time, long-term, multi-parameter, and online diagnostics. Evaluation of multiple parameters in structure, physiology and biochemistry are presented with imaging, electromyography (EMG) and blood test results, respectively.