Publications by Year: 2021

2021

Freedman, Benjamin R., Kwasi Adu-Berchie, Carrie Barnum, George W. Fryhofer, Nabeel S. Salka, Snehal Shetye, and Louis J. Soslowsky. 2021. “Nonsurgical Treatment Reduces Tendon Inflammation and Elevates Tendon Markers in Early Healing”. Journal of Orthopaedic Research 40 (10): 2308-19. https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1002/jor.25251.

Operative treatment is assumed to provide superior outcomes to nonoperative (conservative) treatment following Achilles tendon rupture, however, this remains controversial. This study explores the effect of surgical repair on Achilles tendon healing. Rat Achilles tendons (n = 101) were bluntly transected and were randomized into groups receiving repair or non-repair treatments. By 1 week after injury, repaired tendons had inferior mechanical properties, which continued to 3- and 6-week post-injury, evidenced by decreased dynamic modulus and failure stress. Transcriptomics analysis revealed >7000 differentially expressed genes between repaired and non-repaired tendons after 1-week post-injury. While repaired tendons showed enriched inflammatory gene signatures, non-repaired tendons showed increased tenogenic, myogenic, and mechanosensitive gene signatures, with >200-fold enrichment in Tnmd expression. Analysis of gastrocnemius muscle revealed elevated MMP activity in tendons receiving repair treatment, despite no differences in muscle fiber morphology. Transcriptional regulation analysis highlighted that the highest expressed transcription factors in repaired tendons were associated with inflammation (NfκbSpI1RelA, and Stat1), whereas non-repaired tendons expressed markers associated with tissue development and mechano-activation (Smarca1Bnc2Znf521Fbn1, and Gli3). Taken together, these data highlight distinct differences in healing mechanism occurring immediately following injury and provide insights for new therapies to further augment tendons receiving repaired and non-repaired treatments.

Williamson, Patrick M., Benjamin R. Freedman, Nicholas Kwok, Indeevar Beeram, Jan Pennings, Jeremy Johnson, Daron Hamparian, et al. 2021. “Tendinopathy and Tendon Material Response to Load: What We Can Learn from Small Animal Studies”. Acta Biomaterialia 134: 43-56. https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1016/j.actbio.2021.07.046.

Tendinopathy is a debilitating disease that causes as much as 30% of all musculoskeletal consultations. Existing treatments for tendinopathy have variable efficacy, possibly due to incomplete characterization of the underlying pathophysiology. Mechanical load can have both beneficial and detrimental effects on tendon, as the overall tendon response depends on the degree, frequency, timing, and magnitude of the load. The clinical continuum model of tendinopathy offers insight into the late stages of tendinopathy, but it does not capture the subclinical tendinopathic changes that begin before pain or loss of function. Small animal models that use high tendon loading to mimic human tendinopathy may be able to fill this knowledge gap. The goal of this review is to summarize the insights from in-vivo animal studies of mechanically-induced tendinopathy and higher loading regimens into the mechanical, microstructural, and biological features that help characterize the continuum between normal tendon and tendinopathy.

Seo, Bo Ri, Christopher J. Payne, Stephanie L. McNamara, Benjamin R. Freedman, Brian J. Kwee, Sungmin Nam, Irene de Lázaro, et al. 2021. “Skeletal Muscle Regeneration With Robotic Actuation–mediated Clearance of Neutrophils”. Science Translational Medicine 13 (614): eabe8868. https://doi.org/10.1126/scitranslmed.abe8868.

Mechanical stimulation (mechanotherapy) can promote skeletal muscle repair, but a lack of reproducible protocols and mechanistic understanding of the relation between mechanical cues and tissue regeneration limit progress in this field. To address these gaps, we developed a robotic device equipped with real-time force control and compatible with ultrasound imaging for tissue strain analysis. We investigated the hypothesis that specific mechanical loading improves tissue repair by modulating inflammatory responses that regulate skeletal muscle regeneration. We report that cyclic compressive loading within a specific range of forces substantially improves functional recovery of severely injured muscle in mice. This improvement is attributable in part to rapid clearance of neutrophil populations and neutrophil-mediated factors, which otherwise may impede myogenesis. Insights from this work will help advance therapeutic strategies for tissue regeneration broadly.

Freedman, Benjamin R., Oktay Uzun, Nadja M. Maldonado Luna, Anna Rock, Charles Clifford, Emily Stoler, Gabrielle Östlund-Sholars, Christopher Johnson, and David J. Mooney. 2021. “Degradable and Removable Tough Adhesive Hydrogels”. Advanced Materials 33 (17): 2008553. https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1002/adma.202008553.

The development of tough adhesive hydrogels has enabled unprecedented adhesion to wet and moving tissue surfaces throughout the body, but they are typically composed of nondegradable components. Here, a family of degradable tough adhesive hydrogels containing ≈90% water by incorporating covalently networked degradable crosslinkers and hydrolyzable ionically crosslinked main-chain polymers is developed. Mechanical toughness, adhesion, and degradation of these new formulations are tested in both accelerated in vitro conditions and up to 16 weeks in vivo. These degradable tough adhesives are engineered with equivalent mechanical and adhesive properties to nondegradable tough adhesives, capable of achieving stretches >20 times their initial length, fracture energies >6 kJ m−2, and adhesion energies >1000 J m−2. All degradable systems show complete degradation within 2 weeks under accelerated aging conditions in vitro and weeks to months in vivo depending on the degradable crosslinker selected. Excellent biocompatibility is observed for all groups after 1, 2, 4, 8, and 16 weeks of implantation, with minimal fibrous encapsulation and no signs of organ toxicity. On-demand removal of the adhesive is achieved with treatment of chemical agents which do not cause damage to underlying skin tissue in mice. The broad versatility of this family of adhesives provides the foundation for numerous in vivo indications.