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1.
J Tissue Eng Regen Med ; 5(8): 612-9, 2011 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21774084

ABSTRACT

Topical application of the nitric oxide (NO) donor S-nitrosoglutathione (GSNO) is known to exert beneficial effects on wound healing. The aim of this study was to evaluate, for the first time, the effect of topical application of GSNO on the healing of ischaemic wounds. Wistar rats were submitted to two parallels incisions on their backs; the skin was separated from the underlying tissue, the incisions were sutured and an excisional wound was made between the parallel incisions to create an ischaemic condition surrounding the wound. The animals were separated into a control group, which received a hydrogel vehicle without GSNO, and a GSNO-treated group, which received a GSNO-containing hydrogel. The animals were treated for 7 days consecutively with one daily application. The GSNO-treated group displayed higher rates of wound contraction and re-epithelization, lower amounts of inflammatory cells, an increase in collagen fibre density and organization and a decrease in the neovascularization compared to control. These results show that topical application of GSNO is effective in the treatment of ischaemic wounds, leading to a significant improvement in the wound healing. Therefore, topical GSNO-containing hydrogels have potential for the therapeutic treatment of ischaemic diabetic and venous ulcers.


Subject(s)
Hydrogel, Polyethylene Glycol Dimethacrylate/chemistry , Ischemia/pathology , S-Nitrosoglutathione/administration & dosage , S-Nitrosoglutathione/pharmacology , Wound Healing/drug effects , Administration, Topical , Animals , Cell Degranulation/drug effects , Granulation Tissue/drug effects , Granulation Tissue/pathology , Hydroxyproline/metabolism , Kinetics , Macrophages/drug effects , Male , Mast Cells/drug effects , Mast Cells/physiology , Myofibroblasts/drug effects , Myofibroblasts/metabolism , Rats , Rats, Wistar
2.
IEEE Trans Vis Comput Graph ; 17(11): 1663-75, 2011 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21173453

ABSTRACT

We present a hexahedral finite element method for simulating cuts in deformable bodies using the corotational formulation of strain at high computational efficiency. Key to our approach is a novel embedding of adaptive element refinements and topological changes of the simulation grid into a geometric multigrid solver. Starting with a coarse hexahedral simulation grid, this grid is adaptively refined at the surface of a cutting tool until a finest resolution level, and the cut is modeled by separating elements along the cell faces at this level. To represent the induced discontinuities on successive multigrid levels, the affected coarse grid cells are duplicated and the resulting connectivity components are distributed to either side of the cut. Drawing upon recent work on octree and multigrid schemes for the numerical solution of partial differential equations, we develop efficient algorithms for updating the systems of equations of the adaptive finite element discretization and the multigrid hierarchy. To construct a surface that accurately aligns with the cuts, we adapt the splitting cubes algorithm to the specific linked voxel representation of the simulation domain we use. The paper is completed by a convergence analysis of the finite element solver and a performance comparison to alternative numerical solution methods. These investigations show that our approach offers high computational efficiency and physical accuracy, and that it enables cutting of deformable bodies at very high resolutions.

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