High-resolution optical coherence tomography as a non-destructive monitoring tool for the engineering of skin equivalents

Background: Three dimensional skin equivalents are widely used in dermatopharmacological and toxicological studies and as autologous transplants in wound healing. In pharmacology, there is tremendous need for monitoring the response of engineered skin equivalents to external treatment. Transplantati...

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Veröffentlicht in:Skin research and technology 2006-11, Vol.12 (4), p.261-267
Hauptverfasser: Spöler, F., Först, M., Marquardt, Y., Hoeller, D., Kurz, H., Merk, H., Abuzahra, F.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background: Three dimensional skin equivalents are widely used in dermatopharmacological and toxicological studies and as autologous transplants in wound healing. In pharmacology, there is tremendous need for monitoring the response of engineered skin equivalents to external treatment. Transplantation of skin equivalents for wound healing requires careful verification of their quality prior to transplantation. Optical coherence tomography (OCT) is a non‐contact, non‐destructive imaging technique for living tissues offering the potential to fulfill these needs. This work presents an analysis of OCT for high‐resolution monitoring of skin equivalents at different stages during the culture process. Methods: We developed a high‐resolution OCT imaging setup based on a commercially available OCT system. A broadband femtosecond laser light source replaces the original superluminescence diode. Tomograms of living skin equivalents were recorded with an axial resolution of 3 μm and correlated with histology and immunofluorescence images. Comparison with standard low‐resolution OCT is presented to emphasize the advantages of high‐resolution OCT for this application. Results: OCT is particularly able to distinguish between different layers of skin equivalents including stratum corneum, epidermal and dermal layer as well as the basement membrane zone. The high‐resolution OCT scans correlate closely with two key benchmarks, histology and immunofluorescence imaging. Conclusions: This study clearly demonstrates the benefits of high‐resolution OCT for identifying living tissue structure and morphology. Compared with the current gold standard histology, OCT offers non‐destructive tissue imaging, enabling high‐resolution evaluation of living tissue morphology and structure as it evolves.
ISSN:0909-752X
1600-0846
DOI:10.1111/j.0909-752X.2006.00163.x