Journal of tissue engineering and regenerative medicine
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J Tissue Eng Regen Med · Mar 2020
Intratendon delivery of leukocyte-rich platelet-rich plasma at early stage promotes tendon repair in a rabbit Achilles tendinopathy model.
Tendinopathy is a great obstacle in clinical practice due to its poor regenerative capacity. The influence of different stages of tendinopathy on effects of leukocyte-rich platelet-rich plasma (Lr-PRP) has not been elucidated. The aim of this study is to investigate the optimal time point for delivery of Lr-PRP on tendinopathy. ⋯ For transmission electron microscopy, PRP-1 had the largest mean collagen fibril diameter, and the PRP-2 group showed even smaller mean collagen fibril diameter than saline groups. In conclusion, intratendon delivery of Lr-PRP at early stage showed beneficial effect for repair of tendinopathy but not at late stage. For translation of our results to clinical circumstances, further studies are still needed.
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J Tissue Eng Regen Med · Dec 2019
Preactivated and disaggregated shape-changed platelets protect kidney against from ischemia-reperfusion injury in rat through attenuating inflammation reaction.
This study tested the hypothesis that preactivated and disaggregated shape-changed platelet (PreD-SCP) therapy significantly protected rat kidney from ischemia-reperfusion (IR) injury. Adult-male Sprague-Dawley rats (n = 24) were equally categorized into Groups 1 (sham-operated control [SC]), 2 (SC + PreD-SCP), 3 (IR only), and 4 (IR + PreD-SCP). ⋯ The protein expressions of inflammatory (TNF-α/IL-1ß/NF-κB/iNOS/TRAF6/MyD88/TLR-4), apoptotic/cell death (mitochondrial Bax/cleaved caspase-3/p-53), oxidized protein, mitogen-activated protein kinase family (p-38/p-JNK/p-c-JUN), and mitochondrial-damaged biomarkers displayed a similar pattern, whereas the antiapoptotic (Bcl-2/Bcl-XL) and integrity of mitochondrial biomarkers followed an opposite trend to circulatory inflammation among the four groups (all p < .001). PreD-SCP therapy effectively protected the kidney against IR injury.
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J Tissue Eng Regen Med · Nov 2019
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative StudyComparison of perineural platelet-rich plasma and dextrose injections for moderate carpal tunnel syndrome: A prospective randomized, single-blind, head-to-head comparative trial.
Recent studies demonstrated the utility of perineural injection with platelet-rich plasma (PRP) and 5% dextrose (D5W) as novel strategies for treatment of carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS). The present study comprised a prospective, randomized, single-blind, head-to head comparative trial to compare the 6-month outcome of perineural injection with PRP or D5W in patients with moderate CTS. Fifty-two patients with unilateral moderate CTS were enrolled and randomized into two groups: The PRP group received a single 3-cc perineural injection of PRP under ultrasound guidance, and dextrose group received a single 3-cc perineural injection of D5W under ultrasound guidance. ⋯ All patients (26 patients per group) completed the study. Compared with the dextrose group, the PRP group demonstrated significant reductions in Boston Carpal Tunnel Syndrome Questionnaire function at 3 months (p = .044), distal motor latency at 6 months (p = .028), and CSA at 3 and 6 months (p = .010 and.018, respectively). A single perineural injection of PRP reduced the CSA of the median nerve more effectively than injection of D5W at 3 and 6 months postinjection for patients with moderate CTS.
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J Tissue Eng Regen Med · May 2019
Clinical TrialShort-term effectiveness of platelet-rich plasma in carpal tunnel syndrome: A controlled study.
Platelet-rich plasma (PRP) treatment has a potential to become a part of nonsurgical approach in carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) as a regenerative method. PRP therapies aim to enhance the self-healing ability of human body, by exposing the injured tissue to a high concentration of autologous growth factors. Nerve tissues also seem to benefit from the regenerative effects of PRP concentrates. ⋯ Delta analyses revealed that the difference of BCTQ scores improved better in PRP group. Electrophysiological values improved in PRP group. Our study demonstrated that a single, perineural PRP injection into carpal tunnel provided further improvements in CTS.
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J Tissue Eng Regen Med · Apr 2019
Promising effects of exosomes isolated from menstrual blood-derived mesenchymal stem cell on wound-healing process in diabetic mouse model.
Wound healing is a complicated process that contains a number of overlapping and consecutive phases, disruption in each of which can cause chronic nonhealing wounds. In the current study, we investigated the effects of exosomes as paracrine factors released from menstrual blood-derived mesenchymal stem cells (MenSCs) on wound-healing process in diabetic mice. The exosomes were isolated from MenSCs conditioned media using ultracentrifugation and were characterized by scanning electron microscope and western blotting assay. ⋯ The results demonstrated that exosomes possibly cause less scar formation through decreased Col1:Col3 ratio. These notable results showed that the MenSC-derived exosomes effectively ameliorated cutaneous nonhealing wounds. We suggest that exosomes can be employed in regenerative medicine for skin repair in difficult-to-heal conditions such as diabetic foot ulcer.