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Systemic inflammation induced by a thoracic trauma alters the cellular composition of the early fracture callus.

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TLDR
The results suggest that the systemic posttraumatic inflammation induced by a thoracic trauma disturbed the inflammatory balance during the early healing stage by altering the recruitment of inflammatory cells and cytokine expression locally at the fracture site and thus impaired fracture healing.
Abstract
Background We recently demonstrated that a blunt chest trauma, a strong inducer of the posttraumatic systemic inflammatory response and one of the most critical injuries in polytrauma patients, significantly delayed fracture healing in rats, possibly by the interaction of the systemic inflammation with early regeneration processes locally at the fracture site. The underlying cellular mechanisms, however, have as yet remained unknown. Therefore, the aim of this study was to analyze the cellular and morphologic composition of the early fracture callus after a blunt chest trauma. Methods Rats received an osteotomy of the right femur stabilized by an external fixator in combination with a blunt chest trauma or not. The animals were killed after 3, 7, and 35 days, and the fracture calli were analyzed histologically for new tissue formation, polymorphonuclear leucocytes, macrophages, osteoclasts, and the presence of the proinflammatory cytokine interleukin 6. Results The blunt chest trauma considerably increased the number of polymorphonuclear leucocytes in the callus by Day 3 compared with animals with isolated fractures. The number of macrophages was significantly reduced by the thoracic trauma at Days 3 and 7. The number of osteoclasts was not changed at any postoperative time point. After 3 days, the blunt chest trauma led to a significantly stronger interleukin 6 staining within the periosteal callus in zones of intramembranous ossification. During the time of cortical bridging at Day 35, the amount of newly formed bone was significantly decreased after blunt chest trauma. Conclusion Our results suggest that the systemic posttraumatic inflammation induced by a thoracic trauma disturbed the inflammatory balance during the early healing stage by altering the recruitment of inflammatory cells and cytokine expression locally at the fracture site and thus impaired fracture healing. These findings provide new insights in the pathomechanisms of impaired fracture healing in patients experiencing severe trauma.

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Citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the osteoclastic number was counted, the area of mineralised bone tissue was measured histomorphometrically and density of osteoclasts per square millimetre mineralised tissue was calculated.
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Nanotopography-based strategy for the precise manipulation of osteoimmunomodulation in bone regeneration.

TL;DR: In this article, the effects of immune cells on nanotopography-mediated osteogenesis are emphasized, and the concept of "nano-osteo-immunomodulation" is proposed to provide a valuable strategy for the development of nano-opographies with osteo-IMM modulatory properties that can precisely regulate bone dynamics.
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The crucial role of neutrophil granulocytes in bone fracture healing.

TL;DR: Results indicate that undisturbed neutrophil recruitment and function in the inflammatory phase after fracture is crucial to initiate downstream responses leading to bone regeneration, and suggests that neutrophils may not play a crucial pathomechanistic role in compromised fracture healing induced by an additional thoracic trauma.
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The role of complement in trauma and fracture healing

TL;DR: This review focuses on less known regulatory roles of the complement system after trauma and during fracture healing, rather than on its bacterial and cellular "killing functions", and various complement crosstalks after trauma appear to be crucially involved early after trauma.
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Neutrophils in Tissue Trauma of the Skin, Bone, and Lung: Two Sides of the Same Coin

TL;DR: The effects of severe trauma on the neutrophil phenotype and dysfunction and the consequences for tissue repair are described, which particularly concentrate on the role of neutrophils in wound healing, lung injury, and bone fractures.
References
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TL;DR: Whereas most clinical trials with anti-inflammatory, anti-coagulant, or antioxidant strategies failed, the implementation of pre- and in-hospital trauma protocols and the principle of damage control procedures have reduced post-traumatic complications, the development of immunomonitoring will help in the selection of patients at risk of post- traumatic complications and the choice of the most appropriate treatment protocols for severely injured patients.
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Molecular Mechanisms Controlling Bone Formation during Fracture Healing and Distraction Osteogenesis

TL;DR: The cellular and molecular mechanisms that regulate fracture repair are contrasted with bone regeneration that occurs during distraction osteogenesis, and the relative importance of inflammatory cytokines in normal and diabetic healing is discussed.
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