AI Article Synopsis

  • Porcine models are commonly used in burn healing research, but anatomical locations and inconsistent wound methods can skew results.
  • The study aims to analyze how the anatomical location impacts burn creation and healing, using euthanized and live pigs to assess differences in burn depth and healing times based on location.
  • Findings reveal that ventral skin suffers deeper burns and exhibits slower healing compared to dorsal skin, underscoring the need for consistent treatment strategies and careful consideration of anatomical sites in research to improve the relevance of results for human applications.

Article Abstract

Porcine models are frequently used for burn healing studies; however, factors including anatomic location and lack of standardised wound methods can impact the interpretation of wound data. The objectives of this study are to examine the influence of anatomical locations on the uniformity of burn creation and healing in porcine burn models. To optimise burn parameters on dorsal and ventral surfaces, ex vivo and in situ euthanized animals were first used to examine the location-dependence of the burn depth and contact time relationship. The location-dependent healing in vivo was then examined using burn and excisional wounds at dorsal, ventral, caudal and cranial locations. Lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) and H&E were used to assess burn depth and wound re-epithelialization. We found that burn depth on the ventral skin was significantly deeper than that of the dorsal skin at identical thermal conditions. Compared with burns created ex vivo, burns created in situ immediately post-mortem were significantly deeper in the ventral location. In live animals, 2 out of 12 burn wounds were fully re-epithelialized after 14 days in contrast to complete re-epithelialization of all excisional wounds. Among the burn wounds, those at the cranial-dorsal site exhibited faster healing than at the caudal-dorsal site. This study showed that anatomical location is an important consideration for the consistency of burn depth creation and healing. These data support symmetric localization of treatment and control for comparative assessment of burn healing in porcine models to prevent misinterpretation of results and increase the translatability of findings to humans.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11578799PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/wrr.13190DOI Listing

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