Paper
11 March 2015 Tissue healing response following hyperthermic vapor ablation in the porcine longissimus muscle
John T. Grantham, Brian T. Grisez, Justin Famoso M.D., Michael Hoey, Chris Dixon M.D., James E. Coad M.D.
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
As the use of hyperthermic ablation technologies has increased, so too has the need to understand their effects on tissue and their healing responses. This study was designed to characterize tissue injury and healing following hyperthermic vapor ablation in the in vivo porcine longissimus muscle model. The individual ablations were performed using the NxThera Vapor Delivery System (NxThera Inc., Minneapolis, MN). To assess the vapor ablation’s evolution, the swine were euthanized post-treatment on Day 0, Day 3, Day 7, Day 14, Day 28, Day 45 and Day 90. Triphenyltetrazolium chloride viability staining (TTC staining) was used to macroscopically assess the extent of each vapor ablation within the tissue. The ablation associated healing responses were then histologically evaluated for acute inflammation, chronic inflammation, foreign body reaction and fibrosis. Two zones of tissue injury were initially identified in the ablations: 1) a central zone of complete coagulative necrosis and 2) an outer “transition zone” of viable and non-viable cells. The ablations initially increased in size from Day 0 to Day 7 and then progressively decreased in size though Day 45. The initial Day 3 healing changes originated in the transition zone with minimal acute and chronic inflammation. As time progressed, granulation tissue began to form by Day 7 and peaked around Day 14. Collagen formation, deposition and remodeling began in the adjacent healthy tissue by Day 28, replaced the ablation site by Day 45 and reorganized by Day 90. In conclusion, this vapor ablation technology provided a non-desiccating form of hyperthermic ablation that resulted in coagulative necrosis without a central thermally/heat-fixed tissue component, followed a classical wound healing pathway, and healed with minimal associated inflammation.
© (2015) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
John T. Grantham, Brian T. Grisez, Justin Famoso M.D., Michael Hoey, Chris Dixon M.D., and James E. Coad M.D. "Tissue healing response following hyperthermic vapor ablation in the porcine longissimus muscle", Proc. SPIE 9326, Energy-based Treatment of Tissue and Assessment VIII, 93260E (11 March 2015); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2075410
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KEYWORDS
Tissues

Inflammation

Collagen

Wound healing

Injuries

In vivo imaging

Laser ablation

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