| Literature DB >> 31565150 |
Thoralf Bernhardt1, Marie Luise Semmler1, Mirijam Schäfer1, Sander Bekeschus2, Steffen Emmert1, Lars Boeckmann1.
Abstract
The ability to produce cold plasma at atmospheric pressure conditions was the basis for the rapid growth of plasma-related application areas in biomedicine. Plasma comprises a multitude of active components such as charged particles, electric current, UV radiation, and reactive gas species which can act synergistically. Anti-itch, antimicrobial, anti-inflammatory, tissue-stimulating, blood flow-enhancing, and proapoptotic effects were demonstrated in in vivo and in vitro experiments, and until now, no resistance of pathogens against plasma treatment was observed. The combination of the different active agents and their broad range of positive effects on various diseases, especially easily accessible skin diseases, renders plasma quite attractive for applications in medicine. For medical applications, two different types of cold plasma appear suitable: indirect (plasma jet) and direct (dielectric barrier discharge-DBD) plasma sources. The DBD device PlasmaDerm® VU-2010 (CINOGY Technologies GmbH), the atmospheric pressure plasma jet (APPJ) kINPen® MED (INP Greifswald/neoplas tools GmbH), and the SteriPlas (Adtec Ltd., London, United Kingdom) are CE-certified as a medical product to treat chronic wounds in humans and showed efficacy and a good tolerability. Recently, the use of plasma in cancer research and oncology is of particular interest. Plasma has been shown to induce proapoptotic effects more efficiently in tumor cells compared with the benign counterparts, leads to cellular senescence, and-as shown in vivo-reduces skin tumors. To this end, a world-wide first Leibniz professorship for plasmabiotechnology in dermatology has been introduced to establish a scientific network for the investigation of the efficacy and safety of cold atmospheric plasma in dermatooncology. Hence, plasma medicine especially in dermatology holds great promise.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31565150 PMCID: PMC6745145 DOI: 10.1155/2019/3873928
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oxid Med Cell Longev ISSN: 1942-0994 Impact factor: 6.543
CE-certified plasma sources developed by systematic research and used in clinical studies.
| Atmospheric pressure plasma jet kINPen® MED (INP Greifswald/neoplas tools GmbH, Greifswald, Germany) |
| Dielectric barrier discharge source PlasmaDerm® VU-2010 (CINOGY GmbH plasma technology for health, Duderstadt, Germany) |
| SteriPlas (Adtec Ltd., London, United Kingdom) |
Figure 1Examples of CE-certified plasma sources: (a) kINPen MED and (b) PlasmaDerm VU-2010.
Dermatological applications of cold atmospheric pressure plasma (CAP) tested in clinical pilot or case-control studies.
| Atopic eczema, itch, and pain relief |
| Disinfection (bacteria/fungi/viruses) |
| Treatment of epidermal barrier defects such as ichthyosis |
| Wound healing |
| Scar treatment |
| Treatment of skin tumors |
Overview of studies on treatment of chronic and acute wounds with cold atmospheric pressure plasma (CAP).
| Title | Number of subjects | Conclusion | Wound | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| A first prospective randomized controlled trial to decrease bacterial load using cold atmospheric argon plasma on chronic wounds in patients | 36 patients | Highly significant reduction in bacterial load | Chronic | Isbary et al. [ |
| Successful and safe use of 2 min cold atmospheric argon plasma in chronic wounds: results of a randomized controlled trial | 24 patients | MicroPlaSter alpha: significant reduction in bacterial load | Chronic | Isbary et al. [ |
| Cold atmospheric argon plasma treatment may accelerate wound healing in chronic wounds: results of an open retrospective randomized controlled study in vivo | 70 patients | Wound healing may be accelerated by CAP, particularly for chronic venous ulcers | Chronic | Isbary et al. [ |
| The healing effect of low-temperature atmospheric-pressure plasma in pressure ulcer: a randomized controlled trial | 50 patients | CAP-treated group had significantly better PUSH (pressure ulcer scale for healing) scores and exudate amount | Chronic | Chuangsuwanich et al. [ |
| Clinical use of cold atmospheric pressure argon plasma in chronic leg ulcers: a pilot study | 16 patients | Immediate antimicrobial effects of CAP plasma almost comparable to octenidine without signs of cytotoxicity | Chronic | Ulrich et al. [ |
| Combined antibacterial effects of tissue-tolerable plasma and a modern conventional liquid antiseptic on chronic wound treatment | 34 patients | The combined use of CAP and conventional antiseptics might represent the most efficient strategy for antiseptic treatment of chronic wounds | Chronic | Klebes et al. [ |
| Alleviation of chronic venous leg ulcers with a hand-held dielectric barrier discharge plasma generator (PlasmaDerm® VU-2010): results of a monocentric, two-armed, open, prospective, randomized and controlled trial | 14 patients | PlasmaDerm® VU-2010 device is safe and effective in patients with chronic venous leg ulcers | Chronic | Brehmer et al. [ |
| Randomized placebo-controlled human pilot study of cold atmospheric argon plasma on skin graft donor sites | 40 patients | Donor site wound areas treated with plasma showed significantly improved healing compared with placebo-treated areas | Acute | Heinlin et al. [ |
| Experimental recovery of CO2-laser skin lesions by plasma stimulation | 5 experimental case reports | Nonthermal atmospheric pressure plasma stimulation of laser skin lesion recovery looks promising | Acute | Metelmann et al. [ |
| Scar formation of laser skin lesions after cold atmospheric pressure plasma (CAP) treatment: a clinical long-term observation | 20 laser lesions in 5 individuals | Plasma treatment seems to support the inflammation needed for tissue regeneration | Acute | Metelmann et al. [ |
| Laser scanning microscopy as a means to assess the augmentation of tissue repair by exposition of wounds to tissue-tolerable plasma | 6 subjects with vacuum-generated wounds | CAP led to a significantly more rapid area decline in comparison to no treatment, treatment with octenidine, and sequential treatment with CAP and octenidine | Acute | Vandersee et al. [ |
Figure 2Treatment of chronic ulceration with cold atmospheric pressure plasma (CAP): (a) kINPen MED and (b) PlasmaDerm VU-2010.
Figure 3Example of successful wound healing after treatment with cold atmospheric pressure plasma (CAP): (a) chronic ulceration before CAP treatment and (b) complete healing for the first time since 14 years after CAP treatment for about 5 months.