Cytoarchitectural modifications and antiinflammatory strategies in tendinopathy recovery
Marta Ramos-Barbero, Eva E. Rufino-Palomares, Sergio Serrano-Carmona, Cristina E. Trenzado, Khalida Mokhtari, José Antonio Lupiáñez, Amalia Pérez-Jiménez

TL;DR
This study explores how combining a specific therapy with nutritional supplements can improve recovery from tendon injuries, particularly in a rat model of Achilles tendinitis.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel combination of percutaneous intratissue electrolysis and nutritional supplementation for treating tendinopathy.
Findings
Combining EPI with nutritional supplements significantly improved tendon recovery compared to EPI alone.
Hydroxytyrosol showed the most potent anti-inflammatory effects among the tested compounds.
Nutritional supplementation may serve as a non-invasive alternative when EPI is not possible.
Abstract
Tendinopathies (TPs) are complex conditions marked by inflammation, pain, and impaired function, often due to tendon overuse. Achilles tendinitis, a prevalent TP, affects both athletes and the general population. Despite available treatments, effective tissue regeneration remains elusive. This study investigates the molecular cytoarchitecture and protein expression in TP-related inflammation and evaluates the therapeutic potential of hydroxytyrosol (HT), maslinic acid (MA), glycine/aspartic acid (AA), and their combination with percutaneous intratissue electrolysis (EPI) in a Wistar rat model of induced TP. Animals received a diet supplemented by incorporating the compounds directly into the chow with MA (0.65 g/kg of diet), HT (3 g/kg of diet), and Gly/Asp (Gly: 28.125 g/kg of diet; Asp: 9.375 g/kg of diet). Tendon samples were collected at different TP phases (I, I-II, II, III).…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTendon Structure and Treatment · Osteoarthritis Treatment and Mechanisms · Shoulder Injury and Treatment
