Publications by authors named "Andrew Rodenhouse"

Article Synopsis
  • This study investigates the occurrence of hand-related issues like carpal tunnel syndrome and trigger finger in patients after shoulder surgeries like arthroscopy and arthroplasty.
  • Researchers analyzed data from over 12,000 patients, finding a significant number developed these hand pathologies within one year post-surgery compared to control groups.
  • The results indicated that both arthroscopy and arthroplasty procedures increased the risk of hand-related conditions, with shoulder arthroplasty showing a higher risk than arthroscopy.
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Article Synopsis
  • * The study emphasizes that improper resolution of healing, due to chronic interactions with macrophages, can lead to fibrotic healing, making macrophage modulation a key target for improving recovery.
  • * Using a Ccr2 antagonist at specific phases of tendon healing showed that targeting macrophage recruitment can enhance mechanical properties of tendons, especially during the early proliferative phase, suggesting a strategic approach to improve tendon healing outcomes.
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Successful tendon healing requires sufficient deposition and remodeling of new extracellular matrix at the site of injury, with this process mediating in part through fibroblast activation via communication with macrophages. Moreover, resolution of healing requires clearance or reversion of activated cells, with chronic interactions with persistent macrophages impairing resolution and facilitating the conversion the conversion to fibrotic healing. As such, modulation of the macrophage environment represents an important translational target to improve the tendon healing process.

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Objective: Antibiotics (ABX) are widely used for life-threatening infections and also for routine surgical operations. Compelling evidence suggests that ABX-induced alterations of gut microbiota composition, termed dysbiosis, are linked with diverse disease states including neurological and neurodegenerative conditions. To combat the consequences of dysbiosis, probiotics (PBX) are widely used.

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Background: Functional recovery following primary nerve repair of a transected nerve is often poor even with advanced microsurgical techniques. Recently, we developed a novel sciatic nerve transection method where end-to-end apposition of the nerve endings with minimal gap was performed with fibrin glue. We demonstrated that transected nerve repair with gluing results in optimal functional recovery with improved axonal neurofilament distribution profile compared to the end-to-end micro-suture repair.

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Peripheral nerve transection is associated with permanent functional deficit even after advanced microsurgical repair. While it is difficult to investigate the reasons of poor functional outcomes of microsurgical repairs in humans, we developed a novel pre-clinical nerve transection method that allows reliable evaluation of nerve regeneration, neural angiogenesis, muscle atrophy, and functional recovery. Adult male C57BL/6 mice were randomly assigned to four different types of sciatic nerve transection: Simple Transection (ST), Simple Transection & Glue (TG), Stepwise Transection and Sutures (SU), and Stepwise Transection and Glue (STG).

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Hypothesis: The success of shoulder arthroplasty surgery has been limited by a common complication: glenoid implant loosening. Eccentric loading of the glenoid due to migration of the humeral head is considered to be the major cause of glenoid loosening and is referred to as the rocking-horse phenomenon. Glenoid implant loosening may cause pain, limitation of function, and the need for complicated revision surgery.

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