Molecular mechanisms of post‐burn muscle wasting and the therapeutic potential of physical exercise

Author:

Dombrecht Dorien1ORCID,Van Daele Ulrike12,Van Asbroeck Birgit1,Schieffelers David1,Guns Pieter‐Jan3,Gebruers Nick14,Meirte Jill12,van Breda Eric1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Rehabilitation Sciences & Physiotherapy, Research group MOVANT, Multidisciplinary Metabolic Research Unit (M2RUN) University of Antwerp Antwerp Belgium

2. Oscare, Organisation for Burns, Scar After‐Care and Research Antwerp Belgium

3. Laboratory of Physiopharmacology University of Antwerp Antwerp Belgium

4. Multidisciplinary Edema Clinic Antwerp University Hospital Edegem Belgium

Abstract

AbstractAfter a severe burn injury, a systemic stress response activates metabolic and inflammatory derangements that, among other, leads to muscle mass loss (muscle wasting). These negative effects on skeletal muscle continue for several months or years and are aggravated by short‐term and long‐term disuse. The dynamic balance between muscle protein synthesis and muscle protein breakdown (proteolysis) is regulated by complex signalling pathways that leads to an overall negative protein balance in skeletal muscle after a burn injury. Research concerning these molecular mechanisms is still scarce and inconclusive, understanding of which, if any, molecular mechanisms contribute to muscle wasting is of fundamental importance in designing of therapeutic interventions for burn patients as well. This review not only summarizes our present knowledge of the molecular mechanisms that underpin muscle protein balance but also summarizes the effects of exercise on muscle wasting post‐burn as promising strategy to counteract the detrimental effects on skeletal muscle. Future research focusing on the pathways causing post‐burn muscle wasting and the different effects of exercise on them is needed to confirm this hypothesis and to lay the foundation of therapeutic strategies.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Physiology (medical),Orthopedics and Sports Medicine

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