Publications by authors named "J C Iatridis"

Skeletal muscle regeneration and functional recovery after minor injuries requires the activation of muscle-resident myogenic muscle stem cells (i.e. satellite cells) and their subsequent differentiation into myoblasts, myocytes, and ultimately myofibers.

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Intervertebral disc (IVD) defects heal poorly and can cause back pain and disability. We identified that IVD herniation injury heals regeneratively in neonatal mice until postnatal day 14 (p14) and shifts to fibrotic healing by p28. This age coincides with the shift in expansive IVD growth from cell proliferation to matrix elaboration, implicating collagen crosslinking.

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Poor intervertebral disc (IVD) healing causes IVD degeneration (IVDD) and progression to herniation and back pain. This study identified distinct roles of TNFα-receptors (TNFRs) in contributing to poor healing in painful IVDD. We first isolated IVDD tissue of back pain subjects and determined the complex pro-inflammatory mixture contained many chemokines for recruiting inflammatory cells.

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Article Synopsis
  • Chronic intervertebral disc degeneration causes significant disability and requires better understanding of tissue interactions for effective treatments.
  • A rat model of discogenic pain was used to observe changes in disc degeneration and inflammation in both the disc and spinal regions following an annulus fibrosus injury.
  • The study found that the injury triggers a cascade of inflammation and cellular changes in the spinal cord and dorsal root ganglia, leading to chronic pain mechanisms and indicating the need for targeted therapies at different stages of inflammation.
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Disc degeneration and vertebral endplate bone marrow lesions called Modic changes are prevalent spinal pathologies found in chronic low back pain patients. Their pathomechanisms are complex and not fully understood. Recent studies have revealed that complement system proteins and interactors are dysregulated in disc degeneration and Modic changes.

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