1.The subcutaneous capsules for foreign body in fetal rabbits: preliminary report.
Won Jai LEE ; Beyoung Yun PARK
Yonsei Medical Journal 2001;42(6):595-601
In terms of wound healing, there are fundamental intrinsic and extrinsic differences between fetuses (scar-free healing) and adults. The fetus exhibits less typical inflammatory response (signifiquently neutropenic) with an underdeveloped self-nonself immunologic identity and a lack of cellular immunity. The recruitment of inflammatory cells to a wound may play an important role in the resulting cellular processes and ultimately affect the quality of the healing response. Foreign bodies can act as a source of infection and immunologic reactions. In contrast, there have been few studies of the wound healing of fetus with foreign bodies, where in adults, wounds are healed by tissue regeneration rather than capsule formation and a foreign body reaction. In this study, the wound healing process in an adult rabbit and fetus group, in which either silicone or a sponge was inserted in the uterus, were compared. All specimens showed capsule formation with fibroblast, collagen deposition, neovascularization, and infiltration of inflammatory cells. However, the fetal specimen exhibited mainly acute inflammatory responses and the capsule contained less fibroblasts and collagen deposition. In addition, myofibroblast expression, which mediates wound contracture, was lower in the fetal specimen. These findings were common with cotton implants, which were expected to induce a severe inflammatory response. The inflammatory response induced by foreign materials in fetal tissue showed similar response with that of incisional wound healing. This study may provide a basis for the use of implants such as silicone in future fetal surgery.
Aging/physiology
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Animal
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Female
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Fetus/physiology
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Foreign Bodies/pathology/*physiopathology
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Foreign-Body Reaction/pathology/*physiopathology
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Rabbits
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Uterus/embryology/*physiopathology
2.A Case of Retained Graphite Anterior Chamber Foreign Body Masquerading as Stromal Keratitis.
Eun Ryung HAN ; Won Ryang WEE ; Jin Hak LEE ; Joon Young HYON
Korean Journal of Ophthalmology 2011;25(2):128-131
We report a case of a retained graphite anterior chamber foreign body that was masquerading as stromal keratitis. A 28-year-old male visited with complaints of visual disturbance and hyperemia in his right eye for four weeks. On initial examination, he presented with a stromal edema involving the inferior half of the cornea, epithelial microcysts, and moderate chamber inflammation. Suspecting herpetic stromal keratitis, he was treated with anti-viral and anti-inflammatory agents. One month after the initial visit, anterior chamber inflammation was improved and his visual acuity recovered to 20/20, but subtle corneal edema still remained. On tapering the medication, after three months, a foreign body was incidentally identified in the inferior chamber angle and was surgically removed resulting in complete resolution of corneal edema. The removed foreign body was a fragment of graphite and he subsequently disclosed a trauma with mechanical pencil 12 years earlier. This case showed that the presence of an anterior chamber foreign body should always be considered in the differential diagnosis of idiopathic localized corneal edema.
Adult
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Anterior Chamber/*injuries/pathology
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Corneal Stroma/*pathology
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Diagnosis, Differential
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Eye Foreign Bodies/*diagnosis/physiopathology/surgery
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Eye Injuries, Penetrating/*diagnosis/physiopathology/surgery
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*Graphite
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Humans
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Keratitis/*diagnosis
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Male
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Ophthalmologic Surgical Procedures
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Visual Acuity