The role of endogenous porphyrins in laser therapy of experimental skin wounds

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Abstract

The role of endogenous porphyrins in the effect of laser irradiation on the superoxide dismutase (SOD) activity of wound exudate and rat leukocyte activity has been studied on models of aseptic incised skin wounds. Wounds were irradiated with a He-Ne laser (632.8 nm, 1.5 J/cm2) on the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th days after the beginning of the experiment. Irradiation effects were evaluated by the SOD activity (NBT test) and the activity of leukocytes of the wound exudate (as a chemiluminescent response to opsonized zymosan). It was found that in animals subjected to laser irradiation, the SOD activity sharply increased. This effect depended on endogenous porphyrin concentration and was retained throughout the experiment. The SOD activity in unirradiated animals decreased from the 2nd to the 5th day of experiment. The evaluation of the activity of wound exudate leukocytes did not reveal any distinct dependence of the effect on the concentration of endogenous porphyrins. © 2010 Pleiades Publishing, Ltd.

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APA

Machneva, T. V., Bulgakova, N. N., Vladimirov, Y. A., & Osipov, A. N. (2010). The role of endogenous porphyrins in laser therapy of experimental skin wounds. Biophysics, 55(3), 467–472. https://doi.org/10.1134/S000635091003019X

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