Mechanical Stimulation Improves Survival in Random-Pattern Skin Flaps in Rats (original) (raw)

2010, Ultrasound in Medicine & Biology

This was a study on the effects of 3-MHz ultrasound at 16-and 100-Hz pulse repetition frequencies on angiogenesis and viability of random-pattern skin flaps in rats. A cranially-based dorsal skin flap was raised in 60 EPM-Wistar rats, which were randomly divided into four groups: control, sham, 16-Hz and 100-Hz groups. The mean percentage of necrosis was as follows: control, 42% ± 13%; sham, 18% ± 13%; 16-Hz group, 13% ± 10%; and 100-Hz group, 15% ± 7%, with significant differences between the control and the other groups (p , 0.001). The mean vascular density was as follows: control, 5% ± 2%; sham, 7% ± 2%; 16-Hz group, 21% ± 4%; and 100-Hz group, 24% ± 10%, with significant differences between control and ultrasound groups, and between the sham and ultrasound groups (p , 0.001). Both ultrasound treatments (16-and 100-Hz PRFs) induced angiogenesis, and sham and ultrasound treatments improved viability of random-pattern skin flaps in rats.