Ozonized solutions favor the repair of experimentally induced skin wounds in rats
Rafael C. Sanguanini, Mariana Fagundes Bento, Evelyn de Oliveira, Emmanuel Arnhold, Mariana Batista Rodrigues Faleiro, Leandro Guimarães Franco, Moema Pacheco Chediak Matos, Veridiana Maria Brianezi Dignani de Moura
Abstract
ABSTRACT: This study aimed to evaluate and compare the effects of ozonized solutions on tissue wound repair in rats. Treatments consisted of ozonized water (GA), 0.9% sodium chloride (GCL), ozonized oil (GO), and 0.2% allantoin cream (GAL). The morphometric evaluation showed that wounds of the GA group presented a higher degree of retraction (p<0.05) at three and eight days of treatment (37.96 and 84.81%, respectively). Picrosirius red staining showed that groups GA and GO presented higher deposition (p<0.05) of type I collagen at 15 and 22 days of treatment, respectively. The neovascularization was higher in wounds of group GO on days 3, 8, and 15 (p<0.05), with higher VEGF immunostaining. (p<0.05). Thus, ozonized water enhances wound retraction and assists in the maturation and remodeling phase, while ozonized oil promotes higher neovascularization during tissue repair and higher deposition of type I collagen from the third week of treatment.