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1 May 2005 Synchrotron Radiation-Induced Formation and Reactions of Free Radicals in Human Acellular Dermal Matrix
Sok-Siam Gouk, Nikolai M. Kocherginsky, Yu Yu Kostetski, Herbert O. Moser, Ping Yang, Tit-Meng Lim, Wendell Q. Sun
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Abstract

Gouk, S-S., Kocherginsky, N. M., Kostetski, Y. Y., Moser, H. O., Yang, P., Lim, T-M. and Sun, W. Q. Synchrotron Radiation-Induced Formation and Reactions of Free Radicals in Human Acellular Dermal Matrix. Radiat. Res. 163, 535–543 (2005).

The present work characterizes the formation of free radicals in an implantable human acellular dermal tissue (Alloderm®, LifeCell Corp., Branchburg, NJ) upon irradiation. The tissue was preserved in a vitreous carbohydrate matrix by freeze-drying. Freeze-dried samples were irradiated using a synchrotron light source, and free radicals generated were investigated using the electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) technique. At least two free radical populations, with g factors of 1.993 (∼43%) and 2.002 (∼57%), respectively, were identified in the irradiated tissue. The transformation (reaction) kinetics of free radicals produced was investigated in the presence of nitrogen, oxygen and moisture. The reaction kinetics of free radicals was extremely slow in the nitrogen environment. The presence of oxygen and moisture greatly accelerated free radical reactions in the tissue matrix. The reaction of free radicals could not be described by traditional reaction kinetics. A dispersive kinetics model and a diffusion model were developed to analyze the reaction kinetics in the present study. The dispersive model took into consideration molecular mobility and dispersivity of free radicals in the heterogeneous tissue material. The diffusion model described the radical reaction kinetics as two parallel and simultaneous processes: a first-order fast kinetics mainly on tissue surface and a diffusion-limited slow kinetics in deeper layers of the tissue matrix. Both models described quantitative experimental data well. Further investigation is needed to verify whether any of these two models or concepts describes the inherent radical reaction kinetics in the solid tissue matrix.

Sok-Siam Gouk, Nikolai M. Kocherginsky, Yu Yu Kostetski, Herbert O. Moser, Ping Yang, Tit-Meng Lim, and Wendell Q. Sun "Synchrotron Radiation-Induced Formation and Reactions of Free Radicals in Human Acellular Dermal Matrix," Radiation Research 163(5), 535-543, (1 May 2005). https://doi.org/10.1667/RR3351
Received: 24 August 2004; Accepted: 1 January 2005; Published: 1 May 2005
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