| Literature DB >> 22767997 |
Massimo P Di Simone1, Fabio Baldi, Valentina Vasina, Fabrizio Scorrano, Maria Laura Bacci, Antonella Ferrieri, Gilberto Poggioli.
Abstract
The aim of the present study was to assess the potential barrier effect of Esoxx(®), a new nonprescription medication under development for the relief of gastroesophageal reflux symptoms. Esoxx is based on a mixture of hyaluronic acid and chondroitin sulfate in a bioadhesive suspension of Lutrol(®) F 127 polymer (poloxamer 407) which facilitates the product adhesion on the esophageal mucosa. The mucosal damage was induced by 15 to 90 minutes of perfusion with an acidic solution (HCl, pH 1.47) with or without pepsin (2000 U/mL, acidified to pH 2; Sigma-Aldrich). Mucosal esophageal specimens were histologically evaluated and Evans blue dye solution was used to assess the permeability of the swine mucosa after the chemical injury. The results show that: (1) esophageal mucosal damage is related to the perfusion time and to the presence of pepsin, (2) mucosal damage is associated with an increased permeability, documented by an evident Evans blue staining, (3) perfusion with Esoxx is able to reduce the permeability of the injured mucosa, even after saline washing of the swine esophagus. These preliminary results support further clinical studies of Esoxx in the topical treatment of gastroesophageal reflux symptoms.Entities:
Keywords: Evans blue dye; animal model; bioadhesion; esophagus; hyaluronic acid; reflux esophagitis
Year: 2012 PMID: 22767997 PMCID: PMC3387832 DOI: 10.2147/CEG.S31404
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Exp Gastroenterol ISSN: 1178-7023
Figure 1Experimental model.
Figure 2Perfusion sequences used for the evaluation of mucosal permeability and Esoxx effect.
Abbreviation: EB, Evans blue dye.
Severity of histological damage induced with acidic and pepsin solutions
| Time (min) | Grade 0 | Grade 1 | Grade 2 | Grade 3 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Acidic solution | 15 | 9 (100%) | – | – | – |
| 30 | 1 (11%) | 7 (78%) | 1 (11%) | – | |
| 60 | – | 1 (11%) | 7 (78%) | 1 (11%) | |
| 90 | – | – | – | 9 (100%) | |
| Pepsin solution | 15 | – | 7 (78%) | 2 (22%) | – |
| 30 | – | – | 7 (78%) | 2 (22%) | |
| 60 | – | – | – | 9 (100%) |
Notes: Data expressed as absolute frequency (%) of score attributed (grade 0 = no damage; grade 1 = mild damage; grade 2 = moderate damage; grade 3 = severe damage).
Figure 3Representative examples of cross-sections of esophageal mucosa (H&E) treated with saline (A) or different damaging solutions (B–D). (A) No damage (grade 0). (B) Acid solution (60 minutes): mild damage (grade 1) extended throughout one or two epithelial layers. (C) Pepsin solution (30 minutes); moderate damage (grade 2) mainly localized on superficial layers. A disorganization of epithelial layers was observed along the tissue, with some intact areas and areas in which erosion interested from 30% to 50% of mucosal thickness. (D) Acid solution (90 minutes); severe damage (grade 3) and complete erosion of keratinic epithelial layers, with injury extending through more than 50% of epithelial stratified layer.
Evans blue (EB) staining on control tissue and damaged mucosa with or without Esoxx application
| 0 (no stain) | 1 (weak stain) | 2 (strong stain) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| No damaged mucosa + EB | 2 (100%) | – | – |
| Damaged mucosa + EB | – | 2 (33%) | 4 (67%) |
| Damaged mucosa + Esoxx + EB | 6 (100%) | – | – |
| Damaged mucosa + Esoxx + saline + EB | 6 (100%) | – | – |
Note: Data expressed as frequency of staining score observed in each experimental group (six mucosal samples).
Figure 4Representative examples of cross-sections of esophageal mucosa after EB perfusion. (A) No stain; undamaged mucosa + EB. (B) Weak stain; damaged mucosa (acid solution 90 minutes ) + EB. (C) Strong stain; damaged mucosa (pepsin solution 60 minutes) + EB. (D) No stain; damaged mucosa (acid solution 90 minutes) + Esoxx + EB.
Note: No stain also in the damaged mucosa (pepsin solution 60 minutes) + Esoxx + EB.
Abbreviation: EB, Evans blue dye.