How Minimally Invasive is Microdialysis Sampling? A Cautionary Note for Cytokine Collection in Human Skin and other Clinical Studies

被引:0
作者
Julie A. Stenken
Martin K. Church
Carolyn A. Gill
Geraldine F. Clough
机构
[1] University of Arkansas,Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
[2] Charité—Universitätsmedizin Berlin,Department of Dermatology and Allergy, Allergy Centre Charité
[3] University of Southampton,Infection, Inflammation and Repair, School of Medicine
[4] Southampton General Hospital,Institute of Developmental Sciences, School of Medicine
[5] University of Southampton,undefined
[6] Southampton General Hospital,undefined
来源
The AAPS Journal | 2010年 / 12卷
关键词
biocompatability; cytokines; microdialysis; wound healing and repair;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
It is common to refer to microdialysis as a minimally invasive procedure, likening it to insertion of an artificial capillary. While a comparison of this type allows the process to be easily visualized by those outside the field, it tends to provide a false impression of the localized perturbation of the tissue space that is caused by catheter insertion. With the increased acceptance of microdialysis sampling as a viable in vivo sampling method, many researchers have begun to use the technique to explore inflammatory and immune-mediated diseases in the skin and other organs. Unfortunately, many of the molecules of interest, particularly chemokines and cytokines, are known to be generated during the inflammatory response to wounding and the subsequent cellular events leading to wound repair. With more than 11,000 reports citing the use of microdialysis sampling, only a few researchers have sought to assess the tissue damage that is incurred by probe insertion. For this reason, caution is warranted when collecting these molecules and inferring a role for them in clinical disease states. This commentary seeks to remind the research community of the confounding effects that signaling molecules related to the wounding response will have on clinical studies. Proper controls must be incorporated into all studies in order to assess whether or not particular molecules are truly related to the disease state under investigation or have been generated as part of the tissue response to the wound incurred by microdialysis catheter implantation.
引用
收藏
页码:73 / 78
页数:5
相关论文
共 140 条
[1]  
Helmy A(2009)Microdialysis of cytokines: methodological considerations, scanning electron microscopy, and determination of relative recovery J Neurotrauma 26 549-561
[2]  
Carpenter KLH(2008)Microdialysis monitoring of liver grafts by metabolic parameters, cytokine production, and complement activation Transplantation 86 1096-1103
[3]  
Skepper JN(2008) profiling of adipokines in subcutaneous microdialysates from lean and obese individuals Am J Physiol 295 E1095-E1105
[4]  
Kirkpatrick PJ(2008)Changes in extracellular concentrations of some cytokines, chemokines, and neurotrophic factors after insertion of intracerebral microdialysis catheters in neurosurgical patients Neurosurgery 62 151-157
[5]  
Pickard JD(1998)Cutaneous microdialysis in the rat: insertion trauma and effect of anaesthesia studied by laser Doppler perfusion imaging and histamine release Skin Pharmacol Appl Skin Physiol 11 125-132
[6]  
Hutchinson PJ(2008)Impact of microdialysis probes on vasculature and dopamine in the rat striatum: a combined fluorescence and voltammetric study J Neurosci Methods 174 177-185
[7]  
Waelgaard L(1996)Quantitative assessment of blood–brain barrier damage during microdialysis J Pharmacol Exp Ther 277 1167-1176
[8]  
Thorgersen EB(1987)Cellular reactions to implantation of a microdialysis tube in the rat hippocampus Acta Neuropathol 74 234-238
[9]  
Line P-D(1989)Determination of brain interstitial concentrations by microdialysis J Neurochem 52 1741-1750
[10]  
Foss A(1999)An ultrastructural analysis of tissue surrounding a microdialysis probe J Neurosci Methods 90 129-142