Effects of Cyclic Stretching Exercise on Long-Lasting Hyperalgesia, Joint Contracture, and Muscle Injury Following Cast Immobilization in Rats

Author:

HAYASHI K1,FUKUYASU-MATSUO S2,INOUE T3,FUJIWARA M4,ASAI Y5,IWATA M6,SUZUKI S7

Affiliation:

1. Multidisciplinary Pain Center, Aichi Medical University, Nagakute, Japan

2. Division of Rehabilitation, Gifu University Hospital, Gifu, Japan

3. Department of Rehabilitation, Nagoya University Hospital, Nagoya, Japan,

4. Department of Rehabilitation, Kamiiida Rehabilitation Hospital, Nagoya, Japan

5. Department of Rehabilitation, Faculty of Health Sciences, Nihon Fukushi University, Handa, Japan

6. Department of Physical and Occupational Therapy, Nagoya University Graduate School of Medicine, Nagoya, Japan

7. Department of Health and Sports Sciences, School of Health Sciences, Asahi University, Mizuho, Japan

Abstract

The effects of exercise on mechanical hyperalgesia, joint contracture, and muscle injury resulting from immobilization are not completely understood. This study aimed to investigate the effects of cyclic stretching on these parameters in a rat model of chronic post-cast pain (CPCP). Seventeen 8-week-old Wistar rats were randomly assigned to (1) control group, (2) immobilization (CPCP) group, or (3) immobilization and stretching exercise (CPCP+STR) group. In the CPCP and CPCP+STR groups, both hindlimbs of each rat were immobilized in full plantar flexion with a plaster cast for a 4-week period. In the CPCP+STR group, cyclic stretching exercise was performed 6 days/week for 2 weeks, beginning immediately after cast removal prior to reloading. Although mechanical hyperalgesia in the plantar skin and calf muscle, ankle joint contracture, and gastrocnemius muscle injury were observed in both immobilized groups, these changes were significantly less severe in the CPCP+STR group than in the CPCP group. These results clearly demonstrate the beneficial effect of cyclic stretching exercises on widespread mechanical hyperalgesia, joint contracture, and muscle injury in a rat model of CPCP.

Publisher

Institute of Physiology of the Czech Academy of Sciences

Subject

General Medicine,Physiology

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