| Literature DB >> 29636892 |
Yen-Ta Chen1,2, Kuan-Hung Chen3,2, Pei-Hsun Sung4,2, Chih-Chao Yang5, Ben-Chung Cheng5, Chih-Hung Chen6, Chia-Lo Chang7, Jiunn-Jye Sheu8,2, Fan-Yen Lee8,2,9, Pei-Lin Shao10, Cheuk-Kwan Sun11, Hon-Kan Yip4,10,12,2,13.
Abstract
This study tested the hypothesis that extracorporeal shock wave (ECSW) treatment can effectively inhibit radiation-induced chronic cystitis (CC). Adult male Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats (n = 24) were randomly divided into group 1 (normal control), group 2 (CC induced by radiation with 300 cGy twice with a four-hour interval to the urinary bladder), group 3 [CC with ECSW treatment (0.2 mJ/mm2/120 impulses/at days 1, 7, and 14 after radiation)]. Bladder specimens were harvested by day 28 after radiation. By day 28 after radiation, the degree of detrusor contraction impairment was significantly higher in group 2 than that in groups 1 and 3, and significantly higher in group 3 than that in group 1 (P<0.0001). The urine albumin concentration expressed an opposite pattern compared to that of detrusor function among the three groups (P<0.0001). The bladder protein expressions of inflammatory (TLR-2/TLR-4/IL-6/IL-12/MMP-9/TNF-α/NF-κB/RANTES/iNOS) and oxidative-stress (NOX-1/NOX-2/oxidized protein) biomarkers exhibited a pattern identical to that of urine albumin in all groups (all P<0.0001). The cellular expressions of inflammatory (CD14+/CD68+/CD74+/COX-2/MIF+/substance P+) and cytokeratin (CK13+/HMW CK+/CK+17/CK+18/CK+19) biomarkers, and collagen-deposition/fibrotic areas as well as epithelial-damaged score displayed an identical pattern compared to that of urine albumin among the three groups (all P<0.0001). In conclusion, ECSW treatment effectively protected urinary bladder from radiation-induced CC.Entities:
Keywords: Chronic cystitis; extracorporeal shock wave; inflammation; oxidative stress; radiotherapy
Year: 2018 PMID: 29636892 PMCID: PMC5883143
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Transl Res ISSN: 1943-8141 Impact factor: 4.060