Ionizing Radiation Mediates Dose Dependent Effects Affecting the Healing Kinetics of Wounds Created on Acute and Late Irradiated Skin

Diaz, Candice and Hayward, Cindy J. and Safoine, Meryem and Paquette, Caroline and Langevin, Josée and Galarneau, Josée and Théberge, Valérie and Ruel, Jean and Archambault, Louis and Fradette, Julie (2021) Ionizing Radiation Mediates Dose Dependent Effects Affecting the Healing Kinetics of Wounds Created on Acute and Late Irradiated Skin. Surgeries, 2 (1). pp. 35-57. ISSN 2673-4095

[thumbnail of surgeries-02-00004-v2.pdf] Text
surgeries-02-00004-v2.pdf - Published Version

Download (8MB)

Abstract

Radiotherapy for cancer treatment is often associated with skin damage that can lead to incapacitating hard-to-heal wounds. No permanent curative treatment has been identified for radiodermatitis. This study provides a detailed characterization of the dose-dependent impact of ionizing radiation on skin cells (45, 60, or 80 grays). We evaluated both early and late effects on murine dorsal skin with a focus on the healing process after two types of surgical challenge. The irradiated skin showed moderate to severe damage increasing with the dose. Four weeks after irradiation, the epidermis featured increased proliferation status while the dermis was hypovascular with abundant α-SMA intracellular expression. Excisional wounds created on these tissues exhibited delayed global wound closure. To assess potential long-lasting side effects of irradiation, radiodermatitis features were followed until macroscopic healing was notable (over 8 to 22 weeks depending on the dose), at which time incisional wounds were made. Severity scores and biomechanical analyses of the scar tissues revealed that seemingly healed irradiated skin still displayed altered functionality. Our detailed investigation of both the acute and chronic repercussions of radiotherapy on skin healing provides a relevant new in vivo model that will instruct future studies evaluating the efficacy of new treatments for radiodermatitis.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: ArticleGate > Medical Science
Depositing User: APLOS Lib
Date Deposited: 09 Jul 2022 12:14
Last Modified: 09 Jul 2022 12:14
URI: http://ebooks.pubstmlibrary.com/id/eprint/198

Actions (login required)

View Item
View Item