BackgroundOrbicularis oris muscle, the crucial muscle in speaking, facial expression and aesthetics, is considered the driving force for optimal lip repair. Impaired muscle regeneration remains the main culprit for unsatisfactory surgical outcomes. However, there is a lack of study on how different surgical manipulations affect lip muscle regeneration, limiting efforts to seek effective interventions.MethodsIn this study, we established a rat lip surgery model where the orbicularis oris muscle was injured by manipulations including dissection, transection and stretch. The effect of each technique on muscle regeneration was examined by histological analysis of myogenesis and fibrogenesis. The impact of tensile force was further investigated by the in vitro application of mechanical strain on cultured myoblasts. Transcriptome profiling of muscle satellite cells from different surgical groups was performed to figure out the key factors mediating muscle fibrosis, followed by therapeutic intervention to improve muscle regeneration after lip surgeries.ResultsEvaluation of lip muscle regeneration till 56 days after injury revealed that the stretch group resulted in the most severe muscle fibrosis (n = 6, fibrotic area 48.9% in the stretch group, P < 0.001, and 25.1% in the dissection group, P < 0.001). There was the lowest number of Pax7‐positive nuclei at Days 3 and 7 in the stretch group (n = 6, P < 0.001, P < 0.001), indicating impaired satellite cell expansion. Myogenesis was impaired in both the transection and stretch groups, as evidenced by the delayed peak of centrally nucleated myofibers and embryonic MyHC. Meanwhile, the stretch group had the highest percentage of Pdgfra+ fibro‐adipogenic progenitors infiltrated area at Days 3, 7 and 14 (n = 6, P = 0.003, P = 0.006, P = 0.037). Cultured rat lip muscle myoblasts exhibited impaired myotube formation and fusion capacity when exposed to a high magnitude (ε = 2688 μ strain) of mechanical strain (n = 3, P = 0.014, P = 0.023). RNA‐seq analysis of satellite cells isolated from different surgical groups demonstrated that interleukin‐10 was the key regulator in muscle fibrosis. Administration of recombinant human Wnt7a, which can inhibit the expression of interleukin‐10 in cultured satellite cells (n = 3, P = 0.041), exerted an ameliorating effect on orbicularis oris muscle fibrosis after stretching injury in surgical lip repair.ConclusionsTensile force proved to be the most detrimental manoeuvre for post‐operative lip muscle regeneration, despite its critical role in correcting lip and nose deformities. Adjunctive biotherapies to regulate the interleukin‐10‐mediated inflammatory process could facilitate lip muscle regeneration under conditions of high surgical tensile force.