Testosterone Promotes Nerve Tethering and Acellular Biomaterial Perineural Fibrosis in a Rat Wound Repair Model

Nerve scarring after traumatic or iatrogenic exposure can lead to impaired function and pain. Nerve-adjacent biomaterials promoting a regenerative tissue response may help reduce perineural fibrosis. Our prior work suggests that testosterone may promote fibrotic skin scarring, but it is unknown how...

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Published inAdvances in wound care (New Rochelle, N.Y.)
Main Authors Schuster, Calvin R, Reiche, Erik, Keller, Patrick R, Hu, Sophia, Soares, Vance, Rahmayanti, Siti, Suresh, Visakha, Harris, Thomas G W, Doloff, Joshua C, Tuffaha, Sami, Coon, Devin
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 04.07.2024
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Summary:Nerve scarring after traumatic or iatrogenic exposure can lead to impaired function and pain. Nerve-adjacent biomaterials promoting a regenerative tissue response may help reduce perineural fibrosis. Our prior work suggests that testosterone may promote fibrotic skin scarring, but it is unknown how testosterone alters nerve fibrosis or shifts the response to biomaterials. Sterilized Lewis rats received either testosterone cypionate (+T) or placebo (-T) biweekly. Fifteen days later, wounds were created over the sciatic nerve and covered with an acellular matrix (AM) or closed via primary closure (PC). At day 42, force gauge testing measured the force required to mobilize the nerve, and wound tissue was analyzed. Nerve mobilization force was greater in +T versus -T wounds ( < 0.01). Nerves tore before gliding in 60% of +T versus 6% of -T rats. Epidermal gap ( < 0.01), scar width ( < 0.01), and cross-sectional scar tissue area ( = 0.02) were greater in +T versus -T rats. +T versus -T rats expressed less ( = 0.02) and ( = 0.02). Nerve mobilization force trended nonsignificantly higher for PC versus AM wounds and for +T versus -T wounds within the AM cohort. Testosterone increases nerve tethering in the wound healing milieu, altering repair and immune cell balances. Testosterone significantly increases the force required to mobilize nerves in wound beds and elevates histological markers of scarring, suggesting that testosterone-induced inflammation may increase perineural adhesion. Testosterone may reduce the potential anti-tethering protective effect of AM. Androgen receptor antagonism may represent a therapeutic target to reduce scar-related nerve morbidity.
ISSN:2162-1918
DOI:10.1089/wound.2024.0043