| Literature DB >> 29075364 |
Solange Almeida Dos Santos1, Andrey Jorge Serra2, Tatiane Garcia Stancker1, Maíra Cecília Brandão Simões1, Marcia Ataíze Dos Santos Vieira1, Ernesto Cesar Leal-Junior1, Marko Prokic3, Andrea Vasconsuelo4, Simone Silva Santos2, Paulo de Tarso Camillo de Carvalho1,2.
Abstract
This systematic review was performed to identify the role of photobiomodulation therapy on experimental muscle injury models linked to induce oxidative stress. EMBASE, PubMed, and CINAHL were searched for studies published from January 2006 to January 2016 in the areas of laser and oxidative stress. Any animal model using photobiomodulation therapy to modulate oxidative stress was included in analysis. Eight studies were selected from 68 original articles targeted on laser irradiation and oxidative stress. Articles were critically assessed by two independent raters with a structured tool for rating the research quality. Although the small number of studies limits conclusions, the current literature indicates that photobiomodulation therapy can be an effective short-term approach to reduce oxidative stress markers (e.g., thiobarbituric acid-reactive) and to increase antioxidant substances (e.g., catalase, glutathione peroxidase, and superoxide dismutase). However, there is a nonuniformity in the terminology used to describe the parameters and dose for low-level laser treatment.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29075364 PMCID: PMC5623775 DOI: 10.1155/2017/5273403
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oxid Med Cell Longev ISSN: 1942-0994 Impact factor: 6.543
Figure 1Flow diagram of the results of the study selection procedure.
Representation of the quality rating scale items for animal/tissue research scale (QATRS).
| Item | Rating | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Yes (2) | Partial (1) | No (0) | |
| (1) Animals/tissue samples were randomly allocated to groups. | |||
| (2) The animals/tissue samples were similar across comparison groups. | |||
| (3) The tissue/animal model study was appropriate for the biological properties/questions being evaluated. | |||
| (4) The animal model used was appropriate to make inferences in terms of human application? (tissue similar to, or is human tissue). | |||
| (5) Objective measurements were performed using sufficient standardization of measurement techniques and appropriate instrumentation. | |||
| (6) Reliability of measurements was reported or referenced to indicate sufficient consistency of the outcomes analyzed. | |||
| (7) Are all animals entered into the study accounted for? (All were analyzed or reasons for withdrawal were noted). | |||
| (8) 90% of the animals entered were included in the data analysis. | |||
| (9) The between group/time statistical comparisons used appropriate statistical methods. | |||
| (10) Measures of variability and confidence intervals were provided to indicate the range/size of the effects observed. | |||
| Total score (/20) | |||
Study characteristics of selected experimental controlled animal studies on low-level laser irradiation effects on oxidative stress.
| Authors | Animal type | Gender | Animal race | Age (months) | Weight (g) | Induction model | Site injury | QATRS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Guaraldo et al. [ | Rat | Male | Wistar | 24 | 517.7 ± 27.54 | Fatigue | Gastrocnemius | 17 |
| Ribeiro et al. [ | Rat | Male | Wistar | — | 250 ± 15 | Cryolesion | Tibialis anterior | 19 |
| Oliveira Silva et al. [ | Mice | Mdx/C57 BL | 4 | — | Fatigue | Gastrocnemius/Soleus | 19 | |
| Silveira et al. [ | Rat | Male | Wistar | Adult | 250–300 | Trauma | Gastrocnemius | 19 |
| Assis et al. [ | Rat | Male | Wistar | Adult | 300 | Cryolesion | Tibialis anterior | 19 |
| Davila et al. [ | Rat | Female | Wistar | 5 | 200 ± 20 | Carrageenan | Gastrocnemius | 19 |
| Servetto et al. [ | Rat | Female | — | — | 250–300 | Adrenaline | Left posterior limb muscle | 19 |
| Rizzi et al. [ | Rat | Male | Wistar | — | 250–300 | Impact blunt trauma | Gastrocnemius | 19 |
Study characteristics of selected experimental controlled animal studies on low-level laser irradiation effects on oxidative stress.
| Authors | Sample size | Group number | Number of animals/group | Dependent variables |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Guaraldo et al. [ | 30 | 05 | 06 | Biomarkers of oxidative stress (CAT, SOD, and GPX); biomarkers of lipid peroxidation. |
| Ribeiro et al. [ | 80 | 06 | 05/15 | Chemoluminescence; protein oxidation; antioxidant enzyme activity |
| Oliveira Silva et al. [ | 28 | 04 | 07 | Histology; quantification total creatine kinase; protein carbonyl; detection of superoxide dismutase |
| Silveira et al. [ | 18 | 03 | 06 | Serum creatine kinase activity; hydroxyproline measurement; superoxide anion production; lipid peroxidation assay; superoxide dismutase; protein determination |
| Assis et al. [ | 60 | 03 | 20 | Muscle evaluation; muscle morphological analysis; lipid peroxidation; NO production; immunoblotting; dot blot (for detection of nitrotyrosine formation); cytokine measurements (ELISA); total RNA isolation and real-time PCR |
| Davila et al. [ | 70 | 07 | 10 | Histological analysis; plasma collection; muscle tissue collection |
| Servetto et al. [ | 48 | 06 | 08 | Plasma collection; muscle tissue collection; spectrophotometry in plasma |
| Rizzi et al. [ | 90 | 3 | 30 | Histology; collagen quantification; TBARS analysis; Western blot analysis; electrophoretic mobility shift assay |
Study characteristics of selected experimental controlled animal studies on low-level laser irradiation effects on oxidative stress.
| Authors | Wavelength | Energy density (J/cm2) | Energy | Power density | Spot size (cm2) | Irradiation time per point | Duration of treatments (days) | Treatment frequency (days) | Laser frequency | Power |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Guaraldo et al. [ | 808 | 144 | 4 | 1.071 | 0.028 | 40 | — | 6 weeks | — | 100 W |
| Ribeiro et al. [ | 780/660 | 10 | 3.2 | 1 | — | 10 | 7 | 1, 3, and 7 after the induction of injury | — | 40 mW |
| Oliveira Silva et al. [ | 808 | 107 | — | 1027 | 0,028 | 100 | 3 | Consecutive days | — | 30 mW |
| Silveira et al. [ | 904 | 5 | 2.5 | 400 | 0.10 | 12.5 | 5 | 2, 12, 24, 48, 72, 96, and 120 hours after the trauma | 9.500 | 40 mW (peak power 70 W) |
| Assis et al. [ | 808 | 180 | 1.4 | 3.8 | 0.00785 | 47 | 4 | Consecutive days | — | 30 mW |
| Davila et al. [ | 632.8/904 | 9.5 | — | — | — | 60/47 | 10 | Consecutive days | — | 5/12 mW |
| Servetto et al. [ | 632.8/904 | 9.5 | — | — | — | 60/47 | 7 | Consecutive days | — | 5/12 mW |
| Rizzi et al. [ | 904 | 5 J | — | — | — | 35 | 7 or 14 | Daily | — | 45 mW |
Study characteristics of selected experimental controlled animal studies on low-level laser irradiation effects on oxidative stress.
| Authors | Positive effects: statistically significant | Positive effects: not significant | No effect |
|---|---|---|---|
| Guaraldo et al. [ | X | ||
| Ribeiro et al. [ | X | ||
| Oliveira Silva et al. [ | X | ||
| Silveira et al. [ | X | ||
| Assis et al. [ | X | ||
| Davila et al. [ | X | ||
| Servetto et al. [ | X | ||
| Rizzi et al. [ | X |
Figure 2Schematic representation of mechanisms of photobiomodulation- PBMT action on muscle oxidative stress—the oxidative stress generated during exercise or injury is linked to the migration of cells of inflammatory cells (such as neutrophils and macrophages) to the source of ROS. The increase of the reactive oxygen species triggers a redox state de-balancing. Basic biological mechanism behind the effects of PBMT: red and infrared light is absorbed by cytochrome c oxidase (IV complex of the mitochondrial respiratory chain). PBMT triggers increased ROS production, such as superoxide (O2) and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), leading to the restoration of redox imbalance because of higher production of antioxidant enzymes. Altering the redox state in the cells induces the activation of intracellular signaling, increasing the activation of the transcription factor redox sensitive.