Open Access
1 November 2009 Immunohistochemical investigation of wound healing in response to fractional photothermolysis
Doris Helbig M.D., Marc Oliver Bodendorf M.D., Sonja Grunewald M.D., Michael Kendler M.D., Jan C. Simon M.D., Uwe Paasch M.D.
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Abstract
Despite growing clinical evidence of ablative fractional photothermolysis (AFP), little is known about the spatiotemporal molecular changes within the targeted compartments. Six subjects received three different single AFP treatments using a scanned 250 µm CO2-laser beam. Spatiotemporal changes of skin regeneration were estimated by immunohistochemical investigation (HSP70, HSP72, HSP47, TGFβ, procollagen III, CD3, CD20, and CD68) in skin samples 1 h, 3 days, and 14 days postintervention. The remodeling was uniformly started by regrowth of the epidermal compartment followed by partial to complete replacement of the microscopic ablation zones (MAZ) by newly synthesized condensed procollagen III. From day 3 to 14, the number of macrophages as well as giant cells surrounding the MAZ increased. TGFβ expression was highest 1 h to 3 days following AFP. HSP70 and HSP72 expressions were highest 3-14 days postintervention in the spinocellular layer leading to an upregulation of HSP47. AFP performed by a scanned CO2-laser results in an early epidermal remodeling, which is followed by a dermal remodeling leading to a replacement of the MAZ with newly synthesized (pro)-collagen. During this, an inflammatory infiltrate with CD3+ and CD20+ cells surrounds the MAZ. The count of macrophages and giant cells involved in the replacement of the necrotic zones seems to be crucial for wound healing.
©(2009) Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE)
Doris Helbig M.D., Marc Oliver Bodendorf M.D., Sonja Grunewald M.D., Michael Kendler M.D., Jan C. Simon M.D., and Uwe Paasch M.D. "Immunohistochemical investigation of wound healing in response to fractional photothermolysis," Journal of Biomedical Optics 14(6), 064044 (1 November 2009). https://doi.org/10.1117/1.3275479
Published: 1 November 2009
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Cited by 56 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Skin

Wound healing

Collagen

Carbon monoxide

Proteins

Laser therapeutics

Gas lasers

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