Abstract

Understanding microstructural changes that occur in skin subjected to repetitive mechanical stress is crucial towards the development of therapies to enhance skin adaptation and load tolerance in patients at risk of skin breakdown (e.g. prosthesis users, wheelchair users). To determine if collagen fibril diameter, collagen fibril density, dermal thickness, epidermal thickness, basement membrane length, and dermal cell density changed in response to repetitive stress application, skin subjected to moderate cyclic compressive and shear stresses for 1 h/d, 5 d/week, for 4 week was compared with skin from an unstressed contralateral control. The lateral aspects of the hind limbs of 12 Landrace/Yorkshire pigs were used. Skin from under the stressed site and a contralateral control site was processed for electron microscopy and light microscopy analysis. Electron microscopy results demonstrated significant ( p<0.01) increases in collagen fibril diameter of 15.9%, 22.4%, and 22.9% for the upper, mid, and lower layers of the dermis, respectively, for the stressed skin compared with the control skin. Collagen fibril density (fibrils/unit cross-sectional area) decreased significantly for stressed vs. control by 19.8%, 29.2%, and 31.8% for the upper, mid, and lower layers, respectively. Light microscopy results demonstrated trends of a decrease in dermal thickness and an increase in cell density for stressed vs. control samples, but the differences were not significant. Differences in epidermal thickness and basement membrane length were not significant. These results demonstrate that quantifiable changes occur in collagen fibril architecture but not in the gross tissue morphology following in vivo cyclic loading of pig skin.

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