Background: Postoperative pain caused by trauma to nerves and tissue around the surgical site is a major problem. Perioperative steps to reduce postoperative pain include local anesthetics and opioids, the latter of which are addictive and have contributed to the opioid epidemic. Cryoneurolysis is a nonopioid and long-lasting treatment for reducing postoperative pain. However, current methods of cryoneurolysis are invasive, technically demanding, and are not tissue-selective. This project aims to determine whether ice slurry can be used as a novel, injectable, drug-free, and tissue-selective method of cryoneurolysis and resulting analgesia.
Methods: The authors developed an injectable and selective method of cryoneurolysis using biocompatible ice slurry, using rat sciatic nerve to investigate the effect of slurry injection on the structure and function of the nerve. Sixty-two naïve, male Sprague-Dawley rats were used in this study. Advanced Coherent anti-Stokes Raman Scattering microscopy, light, and fluorescent microscopy imaging were used at baseline and at various time points after treatment for evaluation and quantification of myelin sheath and axon structural integrity. Validated motor and sensory testing were used for evaluating the sciatic nerve function in response to ice slurry treatment.
Results: Ice slurry injection can selectively target the rat sciatic nerve. Being injectable, it can infiltrate around the nerve. The authors demonstrate that a single injection is safe and selective for reversibly disrupting the myelin sheaths and axon density, with complete structural recovery by day 112. This leads to decreased nocifensive function for up to 60 days, with complete recovery by day 112. There was up to median [interquartile range]: 68% [60 to 94%] reduction in mechanical pain response after treatment.
Conclusions: Ice slurry injection selectively targets the rat sciatic nerve, causing no damage to surrounding tissue. Injection of ice slurry around the rat sciatic nerve induced decreased nociceptive response from the baseline through neural selective cryoneurolysis.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/ALN.0000000000003124 | DOI Listing |
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Allen Institute for Brain Science, Seattle, WA, USA.
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January 2025
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Indian Institute of Technology Patna, Patna, Bihar, India.
Biochar has emerged as a promising soil amendment material, offering the potential to enhance mechanical and water retention properties. Geo-environmental structures constructed with biochar-amended soils (BAS) might experience a change in strength and water retention capacity due to extreme climactic changes, resulting in structural failures. The existing literature lacks a comprehensive study on the strength of BAS under prolonged curing, freeze-thaw cycles, and water retention behaviour for varying compaction conditions.
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Virginia Tech, School of Animal Sciences, 175 West Campus Dr, Blacksburg, VA 24061 USA.
Cryotherapy is often used to reduce inflammation in acute equine laminitis cases. Certain hoof temperatures have been suggested as effective in minimizing the inflammatory process; however, there is limited evidence on which methods are best at achieving these temperatures. Our objective was to determine how different methods of cryotherapy influence the rate and extent of cooling for the equine hoof wall.
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Université de Haute-Alsace, Institut de Science des Matériaux de Mulhouse (IS2M), CNRS UMR 7361, F-68100 Mulhouse, France.
The development of hard carbon (HC) electrodes using biobased binders, formulated in water solvent, is of great interest for Na-ion batteries. Five Na-carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC) binders with different molecular weights and degrees of substitution were investigated. The increase in the CMC molecular weight led to an increase in the volume of water necessary for slurry preparation and a decrease in the electrode mass loading.
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Université de Franche-Comté, SINERGIES, F-25000 Besançon, France; Université de Franche-Comté, Plateforme Exercice Performance Santé Innovation, F-25000 Besançon, France; Faculty of Science, Department of Biological Sciences, Thompson Rivers University Kamloops, British Columbia, Canada. Electronic address:
Considerable attention has been devoted to investigating whether acute activation of the sympathetic nervous system, triggered by daily life stressors, increases central artery stiffness (CAS). Overt sex differences in sympathetic neurovascular transduction lead to distinct cardiovascular responses to sympathoexcitation in men versus women. Our study aimed to determine if the cold pressor test (CPT), chosen to simulate highly painful stressors individuals encounter daily, would induce CAS augmentation in a sex-balanced cohort of young individuals and whether any observed CAS increase would differ between sexes.
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