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Comparative Host Response of 2 Human Acellular Dermal Matrices in a Primate Implant Model

Objective: We examined the differences in capsule formation between 2 commercially available human acellular dermal matrices in a nonhuman primate model. Methods: Primates were implanted dorsally with a subcutaneously placed tissue expander and randomized into 3 groups, receiving skin coverage only,...

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Autores principales: Sandor, Maryellen, Singh, Devinder, Silverman, Ronald P., Xu, Hui, De Deyne, Patrick G.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Open Science Company, LLC 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3914385/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24570768
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author Sandor, Maryellen
Singh, Devinder
Silverman, Ronald P.
Xu, Hui
De Deyne, Patrick G.
author_facet Sandor, Maryellen
Singh, Devinder
Silverman, Ronald P.
Xu, Hui
De Deyne, Patrick G.
author_sort Sandor, Maryellen
collection PubMed
description Objective: We examined the differences in capsule formation between 2 commercially available human acellular dermal matrices in a nonhuman primate model. Methods: Primates were implanted dorsally with a subcutaneously placed tissue expander and randomized into 3 groups, receiving skin coverage only, coverage with non-irradiated freeze-dried human acellular dermal matrix, or coverage with gamma-irradiated human acellular dermal matrix. After 9 weeks, soft tissue around the tissue expander was excised and evaluated qualitatively and quantitatively to assess extent of inflammation (CD68 antibodies and interleukin-6 levels), degradation and fibrosis (matrix metalloproteinase-1 and procollagen-1 staining), and mechanical (tensile) strength. Results: Histological evaluation of tissue around the tissue expander indicated differences in host response, suggesting capsule presence in the gamma-irradiated matrix group but not the freeze-dried matrix group. The extent of local inflammation was much higher in the gamma-irradiated matrix group which demonstrated mean (standard deviation) localized interleukin-6 concentration of 67.3 (53.6) vs 16.3 (6.7) pg/mg protein in the non-irradiated matrix group. There was robust degradation and fibrotic response in the gamma-irradiated matrix group versus the freeze-dried matrix group. Mechanical testing indicated mean (standard deviation) ultimate tensile strength of 12.0 (7.1) N in the gamma-irradiated matrix group versus 99.3 (48.8) N in the freeze-dried matrix group. Conclusions: Enclosure of a tissue expander with human acellular dermal matrix untreated by gamma irradiation led to minimal inflammation and minimal evidence of fibrosis/capsule around the tissue expander compared with robust capsule formation around the tissue expander that was covered by a gamma-irradiated human acellular dermal matrix.
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spelling pubmed-39143852014-02-25 Comparative Host Response of 2 Human Acellular Dermal Matrices in a Primate Implant Model Sandor, Maryellen Singh, Devinder Silverman, Ronald P. Xu, Hui De Deyne, Patrick G. Eplasty Journal Article Objective: We examined the differences in capsule formation between 2 commercially available human acellular dermal matrices in a nonhuman primate model. Methods: Primates were implanted dorsally with a subcutaneously placed tissue expander and randomized into 3 groups, receiving skin coverage only, coverage with non-irradiated freeze-dried human acellular dermal matrix, or coverage with gamma-irradiated human acellular dermal matrix. After 9 weeks, soft tissue around the tissue expander was excised and evaluated qualitatively and quantitatively to assess extent of inflammation (CD68 antibodies and interleukin-6 levels), degradation and fibrosis (matrix metalloproteinase-1 and procollagen-1 staining), and mechanical (tensile) strength. Results: Histological evaluation of tissue around the tissue expander indicated differences in host response, suggesting capsule presence in the gamma-irradiated matrix group but not the freeze-dried matrix group. The extent of local inflammation was much higher in the gamma-irradiated matrix group which demonstrated mean (standard deviation) localized interleukin-6 concentration of 67.3 (53.6) vs 16.3 (6.7) pg/mg protein in the non-irradiated matrix group. There was robust degradation and fibrotic response in the gamma-irradiated matrix group versus the freeze-dried matrix group. Mechanical testing indicated mean (standard deviation) ultimate tensile strength of 12.0 (7.1) N in the gamma-irradiated matrix group versus 99.3 (48.8) N in the freeze-dried matrix group. Conclusions: Enclosure of a tissue expander with human acellular dermal matrix untreated by gamma irradiation led to minimal inflammation and minimal evidence of fibrosis/capsule around the tissue expander compared with robust capsule formation around the tissue expander that was covered by a gamma-irradiated human acellular dermal matrix. Open Science Company, LLC 2014-01-31 /pmc/articles/PMC3914385/ /pubmed/24570768 Text en Copyright © 2014 The Author(s) http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/ This is an open-access article whereby the authors retain copyright of the work. The article is distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Journal Article
Sandor, Maryellen
Singh, Devinder
Silverman, Ronald P.
Xu, Hui
De Deyne, Patrick G.
Comparative Host Response of 2 Human Acellular Dermal Matrices in a Primate Implant Model
title Comparative Host Response of 2 Human Acellular Dermal Matrices in a Primate Implant Model
title_full Comparative Host Response of 2 Human Acellular Dermal Matrices in a Primate Implant Model
title_fullStr Comparative Host Response of 2 Human Acellular Dermal Matrices in a Primate Implant Model
title_full_unstemmed Comparative Host Response of 2 Human Acellular Dermal Matrices in a Primate Implant Model
title_short Comparative Host Response of 2 Human Acellular Dermal Matrices in a Primate Implant Model
title_sort comparative host response of 2 human acellular dermal matrices in a primate implant model
topic Journal Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3914385/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24570768
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