Pitchers rejoice? Plasma irradiation might prevent tendon re-tears

Next-generation regenerative treatment shows promise in medicine-engineering collaboration

Rotator cuff tear repair in a rabbit model: Left: A bone hole, created in the area where the rotator cuff was originally attached, is irradiated with non-thermal atmospheric pressure plasma. Right: The rotator cuff is sutured in the bone hole.

The human body, filled with muscles and moving parts, is far from indestructible. Injuries are common, especially where tendons and bones connect. In Japan, rotator cuff tears affect approximately 1 in 4 people over age 50, and reports state that even after surgery, about 20% of cases result in re-tears. To combat this, new healing methods to bolster current clinical practices are needed.

Graduate student Katsumasa Nakazawa, Associate Professor Hiromitsu Toyoda, and then Professor Hiroaki Nakamura at Osaka Metropolitan University’s Graduate School of Medicine, along with Graduate School of Engineering Professor Jun-Seok Oh and colleagues have previously reported positive results using non-thermal atmospheric pressure plasma for bone and tendon repairs. This time, the team used plasma on rotator cuffs of rabbit models to examine the healing rate and strength of the repair.

The study consisted of two groups, a control and a 5-minute plasma irradiation group where rotator cuffs were detached, irradiated, and then sutured. The histology and mechanical strength differences were compared and examined at intervals of two, four, and eight weeks. The results showed that the plasma irradiation group had a tissue arrangement similar to that of a normal tendon-bone junction after four and eight weeks.

It was also found that more bone tissue was formed than in the control group. In biomechanical testing, the force required to break the plasma irradiated rotator cuff after eight weeks was close to the strength for an undamaged one.

“If the results of this research can be applied to current clinical practices, it may be possible to contribute to more reliable rotator cuff repairs and a reduction in the rate of re-tears,” stated Professor Toyoda. “Furthermore, by introducing this technology to sports medicine, it is expected to speed up athletes’ recovery and improve their performance.”

The findings were published in the Journal of Shoulder and Elbow Surgery.

 

Conflicts of interest

The authors, their immediate families, and any research foundation with which they are affiliated have not received any financial payments or other benefits from any commercial entity related to the subject of this article.

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Published: 25 Oct 2024

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Journal: Journal of Shoulder and Elbow Surgery
Title: Non-thermal atmospheric pressure gas discharge plasma enhances tendon-to-bone junction repair in a rabbit model
DOI: 10.1016/j.jse.2024.07.039
Author(s): Katsumasa Nakazawa, Hiromitsu Toyoda, Tomoya Manaka, Kumi Orita, Yoshihiro Hirakawa, Yoichi Ito, Kosuke Saito, Ryosuke Iio, Yoshitaka Ban, Hana Yao, Yuto Kobayashi, Jun-Seok Oh, Tatsuru Shirafuji, Hiroaki Nakamura
Publication date: 17 September 2024
URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jse.2024.07.039