Stem cell therapy: from bench to bedside

  • La recherche

  • Recherche

01/09/2012

​Radiation Protection Dosimetry / septembre 2012, 151 (4), pages 633-639

Type de document > *Article de revue
Unité de recherche > IRSN/DRPH/SRBE/LRTE
Auteurs > TAMARAT Radia , LATAILLADE Jean-Jacques , BEY Eric , GOURMELON Patrick , BENDERITTER Marc

​Several countries have increased efforts to develop medical countermeasures to protect against radiation toxicity due to acts of bioterrorism as well as cancer treatment. Both acute radiation injuries and delayed effects such as cutaneous effects and impaired wound repair depend, to some extent, on angiogenesis deficiency. Vascular damage influences levels of nutrients, oxygen available to skin tissue and epithelial cell viability. Consequently, the evolution of radiation lesions often becomes uncontrolled and surgery is the final option-amputation leading to a disability. Therefore, the development of strategies designed to promote healing of radiation injuries is a major therapeutic challenge. Adult mesenchymal stem cell therapy has been combined with surgery in some cases and not in others and successfully applied in patients with accidental radiation injuries. Although research in the field of radiation skin injury management has made substantial progress in the past 10 y, several strategies are still needed in order to enhance the beneficial effect of stem cell therapy and to counteract the deleterious effect of an irradiated tissue environment. This review summarises the current and evolving advances concerning basic and translational research based on stem cell therapy for the management of radiological burns.

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