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Gas plasma is an approved technology that generates a plethora of reactive oxygen species, which are actively applied for chronic wound healing. Its particular antimicrobial action has spurred interest in other medical fields, such as periodontitis in dentistry. Recent work has indicated the possibility of performing gas plasma-mediated biofilm removal on teeth. Teeth frequently contain restoration materials for filling cavities, e.g., resin-based composites. However, it is unknown if such materials are altered upon gas plasma exposure. To this end, we generated a new in-house workflow for three commonly used resin-based composites following gas plasma treatment and incubated the material with human HaCaT keratinocytes in vitro. Cytotoxicity was investigated by metabolic activity analysis, flow cytometry, and quantitative high-content fluorescence imaging. The inflammatory consequences were assessed using quantitative analysis of 13 different chemokines and cytokines in the culture supernatants. Hydrogen peroxide served as the control condition. A modest but significant cytotoxic effect was observed in the metabolic activity and viability after plasma treatment for all three composites. This was only partially treatment time-dependent and the composites alone affected the cells to some extent, as evident by differential secretion profiles of VEGF, for example. Gas plasma composite modification markedly elevated the secretion of IL6, IL8, IL18, and CCL2, with the latter showing the highest correlation with treatment time (Pearson’s r > 0.95). Cell culture media incubated with gas plasma-treated composite chips and added to cells thereafter could not replicate the effects, pointing to the potential that surface modifications elicited the findings. In conclusion, our data suggest that gas plasma treatment modifies composite material surfaces to a certain extent, leading to measurable but overall modest biological effects.
(1) Background: The aim of this study was to systematically compare TEM sections of mineralized human enamel and dentine prepared by focused ion beam (in situ lift-out) technique and ultramicrotomy through a combination of microscopic examination methods (scanning electron microscopy and transmission electron microscopy). In contrast with published studies, we compared the TEM preparation methods using the same specimen blocks as those for the ultramicrotomy and FIB technique. (2) Methods: A further evaluation of TEM sample preparation was obtained by confocal laser scanning microscopy and atomic force microscopy. In addition, ultramicrotome- and focused ion beam-induced artefacts are illustrated. (3) Results: The FIB technique exposed a major difference between non-decalcified enamel and dentine concerning the ultrastructural morphology compared to ultramicrotome-prepared sections. We found that ultramicrotomy was useful for cutting mineralized dentine, with the possibility of mechanical artefacts, but offers limited options for the preparation of mineralized enamel. FIB preparation produced high-quality TEM sections, showing the anisotropic ultrastructural morphology in detail, with minor structural artefacts. Our results show that the solution of artificial saliva and glutardialdehyde (2.5% by volume) is a very suitable fixative for human mineralized tissue. (4) Conclusions: The protocol that we developed has strong potential for the preparation of mineralized biomaterials for TEM imaging and analysis.
Molecular Mechanisms of the Efficacy of Cold Atmospheric Pressure Plasma (CAP) in Cancer Treatment
(2020)
Plasma medical oncology: Immunological interpretation in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma
(2020)
Over the past several years, various important articles focusing on cancer therapy
approaches in head and neck squamous cell carcinomas (HNSCCs) using cold
atmospheric plasma (CAP) have been published (SEMMLER et al. 2020 [53],
METELMANN et al. 2018 [44], KEIDAR et al. 2011 [33]). This doctoral thesis presents
selected results from a prospective observational clinical study in CAP therapy of
palliative HNSCC patients, carried out at the Department of Oral and Maxillofacial
Surgery/Plastic Surgery of the Greifswald University Medicine. For oral and
maxillofacial surgeons, ulcerated surfaces of locally advanced head and neck squamous
cell carcinomas (UICC IV) offer a challenging treatment assignment with microbial
contamination and tumour progression. The clinical attempt appears to eradicate
microbial contamination and to initiate tumour regression. This doctoral thesis will
describe the processes of human tumour biology and tumour immunology in HNSCCs
and the extent of present knowledge concerning plasma medical oncology as an
anticancer modality. In the introduction of the doctoral thesis clinical results of plasma
therapy in locally advanced HNSCCs (UICC IV) are set out. This mainly includes the
investigation of a therapeutic concept, the treatment phases, the tumour size development
and the morphological changes of the infected tumour surface following cold atmospheric
plasma therapy. In the main part, a detailed immunological interpretation is proposed on
the basis of present preclinical and clinical immunological knowledge. Finally,
unexplored questions in plasma medical oncology are highlighted. This is highly
significant for future plasma research and clinical anticancer therapy.