Histological Evaluation of the Healing Properties of Dead Sea Black Mud on Full-thickness Excision Cutaneous Wounds in BALB/c Mice

2012 ◽  
Vol 15 (7) ◽  
pp. 306-315 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mariam A. Abu-Al-Bas
2013 ◽  
Vol 38 (2) ◽  
pp. 178-184 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Sadigh-Eteghad ◽  
A. Dehnad ◽  
J. Mahmodi ◽  
H. Hoseyni ◽  
I. Khalili ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Vladislav A Dolgachev ◽  
Susan Ciotti ◽  
Emma Liechty ◽  
Benjamin Levi ◽  
Stewart C Wang ◽  
...  

Abstract Objective Burn wound progression is an inflammation driven process where an initial partial-thickness thermal burn wound can evolve over time to a full-thickness injury. We have developed an oil-in-water nanoemulsion formulation (NB-201) containing benzalkonium chloride for use in burn wounds that is antimicrobial and potentially inhibits burn wound progression. We used a porcine burn injury model to evaluate the effect of topical nanoemulsion treatment on burn wound conversion and healing. Methods Anesthetized swine received thermal burn wounds using a 25cm 2 surface area copper bar heated to 80 oC. Three different concentrations of NB-201 (10%, 20%, or 40% nanoemulsion), silver sulfadiazine cream or saline were applied to burned skin immediately after injury and on days 1, 2, 4, 7, 10, 14, and 18 post-injury. Digital images and skin biopsies were taken at each dressing change. Skin biopsy samples were stained for histological evaluation and graded. Skin tissue samples were also assayed for mediators of inflammation. Results Dermal treatment with NB-201 diminished thermal burn wound conversion to a full-thickness injury as determined by both histological and visual evaluation. Comparison of epithelial restoration on day 21 showed that 77.8% of the nanoemulsion treated wounds had an epidermal injury score of 0 compared to 16.7% of the silver sulfadiazine treated burns (p=0.01). Silver sulfadiazine cream and saline treated wounds (controls) converted to full-thickness burns by day 4. Histological evaluation revealed reduced inflammation and evidence of skin injury in NB-201 treated sites compared to control wounds. The nanoemulsion treated wounds often healed with complete regrowth of epithelium and no loss of hair follicles (NB-201: 4.8±2.1, saline: 0±0, silver sulfadiazine: 0±0 hair follicles per 4mm biopsy section, p<0.05). Production of inflammatory mediators and sequestration of neutrophils were also inhibited by NB-201. Conclusions Topically applied NB-201 prevented the progression of a partial-thickness burn wound to full-thickness injury and was associated with a concurrent decrease in dermal inflammation.


2019 ◽  
Vol 7 (3) ◽  
pp. 419-425
Author(s):  
Andrea Steinmetz ◽  
Claudia Gittel ◽  
Denny Böttcher ◽  
Liv Lapko ◽  
Julia Offhaus

Cartilage ◽  
2019 ◽  
pp. 194760351986531 ◽  
Author(s):  
Morten Lykke Olesen ◽  
Bjørn Borsøe Christensen ◽  
Casper Bindzus Foldager ◽  
Kris Chadwick Hede ◽  
Natasja Leth Jørgensen ◽  
...  

Background Repair of chondral injuries using cartilage chips has recently demonstrated clinical feasibility. Autologous platelet-rich plasma (PRP) is a potential promising technique for improving healing response during cartilage repair. Purpose To assess the cartilage repair tissue quality after autologous cartilage chips treatment (CC) with and without repeated local injections of PRP for the treatment of full-thickness focal chondral defects of the knee. Materials and Methods Two full-thickness chondral defects (Ø = 6 mm) were created in the medial and lateral trochlea facets of each knee in 6 skeletally mature Göttingen minipigs. The 2 treatment groups were (1) CC with 1 weekly PRP injection for 3 weeks ( n = 12) and (2) CC alone ( n = 12). The animals were euthanized after 6 months. Samples of whole blood and PRP were analyzed for concentrations of platelets and nucleated cells. The composition of the cartilage repair tissue was assessed using gross appearance assessment, histomorphometry, and semiquantitative scoring (ICRS II). Results Histological evaluation demonstrated no significant difference in the content of hyaline cartilage (CC + PRP: 18.7% vs. CC: 19.6%), fibrocartilage (CC + PRP: 48.1% vs. CC: 51.8%), or fibrous tissue (CC + PRP: 22.7% vs. CC: 21.8%) between the treatment groups. Macroscopic evaluation did not demonstrate any difference between groups. Conclusions PRP injections after CC in the treatment of full-thickness cartilage injuries demonstrated no beneficial effects in terms of macroscopic and histologic composition of cartilage repair tissue.


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