Advances in treatment and repair technologies for exercise-induced skeletal muscle injuries
Cunfeng Li, Guohua Li, Haiyang Zhao, Yue Feng, Xingyu An, Xiangying Li

TL;DR
This paper reviews new non-drug treatments and tissue engineering methods for managing and repairing skeletal muscle injuries caused by exercise.
Contribution
The paper provides a mechanistic synthesis of non-pharmacological interventions for muscle injury pain and repair.
Findings
Manual and exercise therapy modulate pain through biomechanical and neurocognitive mechanisms.
Tissue engineering techniques like 3D bioprinting and exosome therapy enhance muscle regeneration.
Balanced inflammatory responses are crucial for effective tissue repair and pain management.
Abstract
Skeletal muscle injuries, whether acute or chronic, are a major clinical challenge due to their high incidence, persistent pain, and risk of functional impairment. While pharmacological interventions like NSAIDs and opioids remain mainstays for pain management, their prolonged use is limited by adverse effects and potential interference with muscle regeneration. Emerging evidence underscores the importance of balanced inflammatory responses in tissue repair, highlighting the need for alternative strategies. Manual therapy and exercise therapy modulate nociceptive signaling through biomechanical, biochemical, and neurocognitive mechanisms, including inhibition of central sensitization and activation of descending analgesic pathways, while advanced tissue engineering approaches (3D bioprinting, exosome therapy, and genetic engineering) directly target inflammation, enhance vascular and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsExercise and Physiological Responses · Muscle Physiology and Disorders · Sports injuries and prevention
