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1.
J Biol Regul Homeost Agents ; 31(2 Suppl. 2): 213-218, 2017.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28702985

ABSTRACT

In recent decades, regenerative medicine has achieved an important evolution at both a conceptual level and scientific production, which explains the current and future possibilities of therapy and daily clinical practice. The main aim of regenerative medicine is the complex system of repair/regeneration. The current literature on the subject demonstrates the advantage of visible light therapy for skin injuries and diseases with the photobiomodulation in which light at low energy levels modulates intra- and extra-cellular photoreceptors by molecular and cellular processes that can stimulate both anti-inflammatory mechanisms and cell proliferative response. The irradiation effects are activated soon after exposure. The anti-inflammatory action on some classes of cytokines and cells (e.g. mast cells and macrophages) is completed with the stimulation of the nitric oxide production, which has an anti-inflammatory and vasodilation action, and gives analgesic relief. Our attention focused on photobiomodulator medical device emitting polarized light. 30 patients (19 women and 11 men) were enrolled in the present study. They were treated for chronic lesions using Bioptron® Light Therapy System device. Patients were initially subjected to Bioptron® light for 20 min after cleansing of the lesion. The operating protocol provides 24 sessions: twice per week for 12 weeks. Twenty patients have been studied for symptoms, histological samples and ulcer characteristics. After 2 months, a reduction of 50% of the lesions was recorded in 18 patients (60%), while in the remaining patients a slower healing was observed. The total wound healing was achieved after 3 months in 13 patients (43%). The examined parameters of the symptom were exudation, pain and signs of infection. Results at 1 and 3 months were, Exudation: at 1 month reduction and positive modulation was observed in 16 patients (53%) and in 25 patients at 3 months; Pain: (evaluated with Vas scale), decreased in 21 patients at 1 month (70%) and in 100% of cases at 3 months; Infections: regressed or disappeared in 100% of cases after the first month. Today, it is no longer time for monotherapy applications, especially in regenerative medicine and the adoption of biophysical therapies can play a positive anti-inflammatory and regenerative role enhancing the function of non-invasive therapies.

2.
Acta Neurochir Suppl ; 75: 45-7, 1999.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10635376

ABSTRACT

We examined the metabolic response of the brain underlying subdural hematomas or surrounding contusions to hyperventilation and looked for evidence of ischemia. Twelve consecutive patients with severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) (GCS < 8) who required surgery for evacuation of subdural hematoma or hemorrhagic contusion were studied. At surgery, a microdialysis catheter was placed into the cortex in a gyrus adjacent to the contusion or underlying the subdural hematoma. A thermal diffusion flow probe was placed on the cortex directly above the dialysis catheter. On days 1 and 3 post injury, two trials of hyperventilation were performed which dropped the patients' pCO2 10 mm Hg for 30 minutes. Monitoring of CBF and collection of dialysis fluid continued throughout each hyperventilation trial. Data was analyzed for a three hour window surrounding each hyperventilation. Brief periods of hyperventilation did not cause a significant elevation of the extracellular lactate/pyruvate ratio or glutamate level in areas of the brain likely to be the most vulnerable to secondary injury. In spite of hyperventilation leading to a significant decline in local CBF in 20% of the trials, there was no evidence of ischemia or excitatory amino acid release associated with hyperventilation.


Subject(s)
Brain Injuries/complications , Brain/blood supply , Brain/metabolism , Carbon Dioxide/blood , Extracellular Space/metabolism , Hematoma, Subdural/etiology , Hematoma, Subdural/metabolism , Hypocapnia/diagnosis , Brain Injuries/diagnosis , Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid , Glasgow Coma Scale , Glutamic Acid/metabolism , Humans , Hyperventilation/etiology , Hypocapnia/etiology , Intracranial Pressure , Lactic Acid/metabolism , Microdialysis/methods , Pyruvic Acid/metabolism , Time Factors
3.
Brain Res ; 760(1-2): 137-49, 1997 Jun 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9237528

ABSTRACT

Pancreatic polypeptide (PP) is a regulatory peptide that modulates gastrointestinal function. Previously we demonstrated PP receptors in the brainstem and interpeduncular nucleus, and the PP receptors in the brainstem appear to modulate gastric motility and pancreatic exocrine secretion. The purpose of this study is to extend our understanding of the distribution of PP receptors in the rat brain in order to determine the systems that are potentially modulated by PP. Rat brains were studied using 125I-PP receptor autoradiography on cryostat sections of the entire brain cut in three planes (horizontal, sagittal, and coronal). Brain regions exhibiting PP binding sites were confirmed when identified in all three planes of section. Saturable PP binding was identified in the hypothalamus (arcuate and paraventricular n), the rostral forebrain (medial preoptic area, anterior olfactory nucleus, islands of Calleja, the dorsal endopiriform n, piriform cortex, and the bed n of the stria terminalis), medial amygdaloid n; the thalamus (anteromedial thal. n; reuniens thal. n; and paraventricular thal n), the interpeduncular red nucleus, substantia nigra, parabrachial n; locus coeruleus, mesencephalic trigeminal n, dorsal motor n of the vagus, the n solitary tract, and the area postrema. We conclude that PP receptors are distributed widely throughout the rat brain. The distribution of many of these PP binding sites corresponds to brain regions regulating digestion and autonomic function. We speculate, based on the patterns of binding in the olfactory and limbic systems, that PP receptors might be involved in positive reinforcement of ingestion behavioral as well as modulation of gastrointestinal function.


Subject(s)
Brain/metabolism , Receptors, Gastrointestinal Hormone/metabolism , Animals , Autoradiography , Male , Radioligand Assay , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley
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