The use of lavage was compared to negative pressure wound therapy (NPWT) with instillation (NPWTi) to assess extent of soft tissue damage, debris removal and environmental cross-contamination susceptibility in three distinct models. Scanning electron microscopy in an ex vivo model showed increased visible tissue trauma from lavage treatment at low and high pressures versus NPWTi, with the degree of trauma relative to the pressure of the irrigant. These results were corroborated in granulating full-thickness excisional swine wounds coated with dextran solution to simulate wound debris. Both low-pressure lavage and NPWTi demonstrated effective cleansing in this model, reducing debris by >90%. However, using three-dimensional photography to evaluate tissue damage by measuring immediate tissue swelling (changes in wound volume and depth) showed significantly greater (P < 0.05) swelling in low-pressure lavage-treated wounds compared with NPWTi-treated wounds. Lastly, bench top wound models were inoculated with fluorescent bacterial particles to assess environmental cross-contamination potential and collected at measured distances after treatment with low-pressure lavage and NPWTi. No evidence of cross-contamination was found with NPWTi, whereas one-half of the particles became 'aerosolised' during low-pressure lavage (P < 0.05). Collectively, these studies demonstrate the effective wound cleansing capabilities of NPWTi without the tissue damage and environmental contamination associated with lavage.
Gametes carry the DNA that will direct the development of the next generation. By compromising genetic integrity, DNA damage and mutagenesis threaten the ability of gametes to fulfill their biological function. DNA repair pathways function in germ cells and serve to ameliorate much DNA damage and prevent mutagenesis. High base excision repair (BER) activity is documented for spermatogenic cells. DNA polymerase-beta (POLB) is required for the short-patch BER pathway. Because mice homozygous null for the Polb gene die soon after birth, mice heterozygous for Polb were used to examine the extent to which POLB contributes to maintaining spermatogenic genomic integrity in vivo. POLB protein levels were reduced only in mixed spermatogenic cells. In vitro short-patch BER activity assays revealed that spermatogenic cell nuclear extracts obtained from Polb heterozygous mice had one third the BER activity of age-matched control mice. Polb heterozygosity had no effect on the BER activities of somatic tissues tested. The Polb heterozygous mouse line was crossed with the lacI transgenic Big Blue mouse line to assess mutant frequency. The spontaneous mutant frequency for mixed spermatogenic cells prepared from Polb heterozygous mice was 2-fold greater than that of wild-type controls, but no significant effect was found among the somatic tissues tested. These results demonstrate that normal POLB abundance is necessary for normal BER activity, which is critical in maintaining a low germline mutant frequency. Notably, spermatogenic cells respond differently than somatic cells to Polb haploinsufficiency.
PurPose: Negative pressure wound therapy (NPWT*) can be coupled with automated delivery and removal of topical wound treatment solutions and suspensions (NPWTi † ) or delivered in either continuous or non-continuous modes. This porcine study compared the granulation response, genomic response, and resulting tissue quality of NPWTi using normal saline with instillation foam dressing ‡ to NPWT using standard foam dressing § in continuous and non-continuous modes. The quality of the resulting granulation tissue was assessed using these key measures: collagen content, angiogenesis, extracellular matrix components, and cellular energetics.
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