| Literature DB >> 23832453 |
Brian Mueller Holt1, Daniel Holod Betz, Taylor Ann Ford, James Peter Beck, Roy Drake Bloebaum, Sujee Jeyapalina.
Abstract
Percutaneous medical devices are indispensable in contemporary clinical practice, but the associated incidence of low to moderate mortality infections represents a significant economic and personal cost to patients and healthcare providers. Percutaneous osseointegrated prosthetics also suffer from a similar risk of infection, limiting their clinical acceptance and usage in patients with limb loss. We hypothesized that transepidermal water loss (TEWL) management at the skin-implant interface may improve and maintain a stable skin-to-implant interface. In this study, skin reactions in a 3-month, pig dorsum model were assessed using standard histology, immunohistochemistry, and quantitative image analysis. Immunohistochemical analysis of peri-implant tissue explants showed evidence of: continuous healing (cytokeratin 6+), hypergranulation tissue (procollagen+), hyper-vascularity (collagen 4+), and the presence of fibrocytes (CD45+ and procollagen type 1+). Importantly, the gross skin response was correlated to a previous load-bearing percutaneous osseointegrated prosthetic sheep study conducted in our lab. The skin responses of the two models indicated a potentially shared mechanism of wound healing behavior at the skin-implant interface. Although TEWL management did not reduce skin migration at the skin-implant interface, the correlation of qualitative and quantitative measures validated the pig dorsum model as a high-throughput platform for translational science based percutaneous interface investigations in the future.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23832453 PMCID: PMC3770289 DOI: 10.1007/s10856-013-4975-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Mater Sci Mater Med ISSN: 0957-4530 Impact factor: 3.896