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Drug Design, Development and Therapy 2018

Effects of the traditional Chinese medicine baicalein on the viability of random pattern skin flaps in rats.

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Renjin Lin
Jinti Lin
Shihen Li
Jian Ding
Hongqiang Wu
Guangheng Xiang
Shi Li
Yijia Huang
Dingsheng Lin
Weiyang Gao

Keywords

Abstract

UNASSIGNED

Random skin flaps are routinely placed during plastic and reconstructive surgery, but the distal areas often develop ischemia and necrosis. Baicalein, a major flavonoid extracted from the traditional Chinese herbal medicine huangqin, Scutellaria baicalensis Georgi, may improve flap viability.

UNASSIGNED

Rats were randomly divided into baicalein and control groups and they underwent placement of modified McFarlane flaps after intraperitoneal administration of baicalein or vehicle. Flap survival and water content were measured 7 days later, as were angiogenesis, apoptosis, and oxidative stress in ischemic flaps.

UNASSIGNED

Baicalein promoted flap survival, reduced edema, increased mean vessel density, and enhanced vascular endothelial growth factor production at both the translational and transcriptional levels. Baicalein reduced caspase 3 cleavage, increased superoxidase dismutase and glutathione levels, and decreased the malondialdehyde level.

UNASSIGNED

Baicalein promoted flap viability by stimulating angiogenesis and inhibiting apoptosis and oxidation.

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