1. The Tibial Fracture-Pin Model: A Clinically Relevant Mouse Model of Orthopedic Injury.
- Author
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Muwanga GPB, Siliezar-Doyle J, Ortiz AA, Kaslow J, Haight ES, and Tawfik VL
- Subjects
- Animals, Disease Models, Animal, Fracture Fixation, Internal, Humans, Mice, Pain, Retrospective Studies, Tibia, Treatment Outcome, Fracture Fixation, Intramedullary methods, Tibial Fractures surgery
- Abstract
The tibial fracture-pin model is a mouse model of orthopedic trauma and surgery that recapitulates the complex muscle, bone, nerve, and connective tissue damage that manifests with this type of injury in humans. This model was developed because previous models of orthopedic trauma did not include simultaneous injury to multiple tissue types (bone, muscle, nerves) and were not truly representative of human complex orthopedic trauma. The authors therefore modified previous models of orthopedic trauma and developed the tibial fracture-pin model. This modified fracture model consists of a unilateral open tibial fracture with intramedullary nail (IMN) internal fixation and simultaneous tibialis anterior (TA) muscle injury, resulting in mechanical allodynia that lasts up to 5 weeks post injury. This series of protocols outlines the detailed steps to perform the clinically relevant orthopedic trauma tibial fracture-pin model, followed by a modified hot plate assay to examine nociceptive changes after orthopedic injury. Taken together, these detailed, reproducible protocols will allow pain researchers to expand their toolkit for studying orthopedic trauma-induced pain.
- Published
- 2022
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