Targeted muscle reinnervation attenuates neuropathic pain and neuroma development in a rat model of tibial nerve transection
Li Li, Ainizier Yalikun, QiYue Zhang, DeBin Xiong, Tao Jiang, Fan Bu, QingTang Zhu, Aihemaitijiang Yusufu

TL;DR
Targeted muscle reinnervation (TMR) reduces neuroma formation and pain better than other surgical techniques in a rat model of nerve injury.
Contribution
This study is the first to systematically compare TMR, RPNI, and NIM in a rat model for preventing neuroma and neuropathic pain.
Findings
TMR significantly reduced neuroma formation and pain-related behaviors compared to controls.
TMR preserved nerve structure and suppressed inflammatory and pain-related biomarkers.
TMR outperformed RPNI and NIM in mitigating post-injury neuropathic pain.
Abstract
Peripheral nerve injuries often lead to painful neuroma formation and chronic neuropathic pain, and the optimal surgical strategy for prevention remains debated. Targeted muscle reinnervation (TMR), regenerative peripheral nerve interfaces (RPNI), and nerve-in-muscle implantation (NIM) are surgical techniques developed to mitigate neuroma-related pain, but their relative efficacy has not been compared systematically. This preclinical study compared TMR, NIM, and two RPNI variants in a rat tibial nerve transection model to identify which approach best reduces neuroma formation and pain. Sprague-Dawley rats underwent right tibial nerve transection and were randomized into five groups: control (no repair), NIM, W-RPNI (wrapped RPNI), E-RPNI (embedded RPNI), or TMR. Behavioral outcomes including gait analysis (CatWalk), mechanical hypersensitivity (von Frey test), thermal hyperalgesia…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNerve injury and regeneration · Pain Mechanisms and Treatments · Nerve Injury and Rehabilitation
