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Title: Blood levels, apoptosis, and homing of the endothelial progenitor cells after skin burns and escharectomy. Author: Foresta C, Schipilliti M, De Toni L, Magagna S, Lancerotto L, Azzena B, Vindigni V, Mazzoleni F. Journal: J Trauma; 2011 Feb; 70(2):459-65. PubMed ID: 21307748. Abstract: BACKGROUND: Skin burns are an acute trauma involving an extensive vascular damage and an intense inflammatory response. Bone marrow-derived circulating endothelial progenitor cells (EPC) are known to migrate to sites of neovascularization in response to mediators (vascular endothelial growth factor and stromal cell-derived factor-1) released after trauma and ischemia, to contribute to wound healing, and to increase neovascularization of animal prefabricated flaps. Recent data showed an increase in EPC number in burned patients and a positive correlation between EPC number and total body surface area (TBSA) burnt, but data were limited to the first 5 days after thermal injury. METHODS: By using flow cytometry, we studied EPC (CD34, CD133, CD45, and KDR cells) blood levels, apoptosis, and homing (stromal cell-derived factor-1 receptor expression and CXC chemokine receptor 4) in a 1-month follow-up postburn in 25 patients with ≥15% TBSA burnt, at least grade II burns and escharectomy performed at days 5 to 6, with respect to 31 controls. RESULTS: EPC count at admission showed a positive linear correlation with TBSA burnt. The EPC blood levels of the patients were low (50.7 cells/mL±61.8 cells/mL) immediately after thermal injury, then increased with two peaks, at day 1 (188.3 cells/mL±223.2 cells/mL) and day 12 (253.1 cells/mL±430.7 cells/mL) with respect to controls (95.2 cells/mL±28.5 cells/mL, p<0.05), and then returned to normal levels in 1 month. EPC apoptotic rate and inflammatory parameters paralleled EPC blood count. No significant variations were found in CXC chemokine receptor 4 expression. CONCLUSIONS: Thermal injury and escharectomy seem to induce an intense response in EPC production. In particular, escharectomy could improve physiologic wound repair by increasing EPC levels.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]