Abstract

In regenerative medicine, the problem of growing mesenchymal stem cells from the bone marrow often arises. In such cases is important that the number of initial cells was large enough and their proliferative activity was high. We believe that this problem can be solved by short-term heating of local areas of the bone marrow in vivo with laser radiation. In this regard, it is of interest to study the optical and temperature fields induced inside the tubular bone under external laser irradiation. In this work, we obtained experimental data on the spatial distribution of temperature in the bone marrow of the rat femur in vitro under external exposure to laser radiation with wavelengths of 970 and 1940nm. Radiation delivery was carried out using an optical fiber which tip contacted the surface of the femur bone. A thin thermocouple was used to measure the temperature in a local area of the bone marrow. By moving the optical fiber tip discretely along the longitudinal axis of the bone, and the thermocouple in the perpendicular direction, the spatial temperature distributions in dynamics were measured. Similarly, the spatial distributions of the laser radiation intensity were measured by replacing thermocouple with optical fiber probe. A thermal camera was used to control the temperature of the bone surface near the tip of the fiber. It was shown that the marrow could be heated from the outside by about 5-10°C during 10s without significant overheating of the bone tissue. The data obtained make it possible to estimate the volume of the bone marrow heated by the laser to a predetermined temperature and to make a reasonable choice of laser exposure modes to stimulate the proliferative activity of bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells in vivo.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call