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    Medical Gas Plasma—A Potent ROS-Generating Technology for Managing Intraoperative Bleeding Complications
    (Basel : MDPI, 2022) Miebach, Lea; Poschkamp, Broder; van der Linde, Julia; Bekeschus, Sander
    Cold medical gas plasmas are under pre-clinical investigation concerning their hemostatic activity and could be applied for intra-operative bleeding control in the future. The technological leap innovation was their generation at body temperature, thereby causing no thermal harm to the tissue and ensuring tissue integrity. This directly contrasts with current techniques such as electrocautery, which induces hemostasis by carbonizing the tissue using a heated electrode. However, the necrotized tissue is prone to fall, raising the risk of post-operative complications such as secondary bleedings or infection. In recent years, various studies have reported on the ability of medical gas plasmas to induce blood coagulation, including several suggestions concerning their mode of action. As non-invasive and gentle hemostatic agents, medical gas plasmas could be particularly eligible for vulnerable tissues, e.g., colorectal surgery and neurosurgery. Further, their usage could be beneficial regarding the prevention of post-operative bleedings due to the absence or sloughing of eschar. However, no clinical trials or individual healing attempts for medical gas plasmas have been reported to pave the way for clinical approvement until now, despite promising results in experimental animal models. In this light, the present mini-review aims to emphasize the potential of medical gas plasmas to serve as a hemostatic agent in clinical procedures. Providing a detailed overview of the current state of knowledge, feasible application fields are discussed, and possible obstacles are addressed.
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    Differential Sensitivity of Two Leukemia Cell Lines towards Two Major Gas Plasma Products Hydrogen Peroxide and Hypochlorous Acid
    (Basel : MDPI, 2022) Singer, Debora; Miebach, Lea; Bekeschus, Sander
    Oxidative stress has major implications for health and disease. At the same time, the term collectively describes the reactions to different types of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and oxidants, including hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) and hypochlorous acid (HOCl). However, how both compare in terms of cytotoxicity and mechanism of action is less known. Using two leukemia cell lines, Jurkat and THP-1, as model systems at similar cell concentrations, we found an 8-fold greater sensitivity of the former over the latter for H2O2 exposure. Unexpectantly, this was not the case with HOCl exposure. Jurkat cells were 2-fold more resistant to HOCl-induced cytotoxicity than THP-1 cells. In each cell type, the relatively more toxic oxidant also induced activation of caspases 3 and 7 at earlier time points, as time-lapse fluorescence microscopy revealed. The effects observed did not markedly correlate with changes in intracellular GSH and GSSG levels. In addition, siRNA-mediated knockdown of the Nrf2 target HMOX-1 encoding for HO-1 protein and the growth and survival factor IL-8 revealed Jurkat cells to become more sensitive to HOCl, while HO-1 and IL-8 siRNA-mediated knockdown in THP-1 cells produced greater sensitivity towards H2O2. siRNA-mediated knockdown of catalase increased oxidant sensitivity only negligibly. Collectively, the data suggest striking HOCl-resistance of Jurkat and H2O2 resistance of THP-1 cells, showing similar protective roles of HO-1 and IL-8, while caspase activation kinetics differ.
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    Low-Dose Oxidant Toxicity and Oxidative Stress in Human Papillary Thyroid Carcinoma Cells K1
    (Basel : MDPI, 2022) Lens, Hannah Hamada Mendonça; Lopes, Natália Medeiros Dias; Pasqual-Melo, Gabriella; Marinello, Poliana Camila; Miebach, Lea; Cecchini, Rubens; Bekeschus, Sander; Cecchini, Alessandra Lourenço
    Medical gas plasmas are of emerging interest in pre-clinical oncological research. Similar to an array of first-line chemotherapeutics and physics-based therapies already approved for clinical application, plasmas target the tumor redox state by generating a variety of highly reactive species eligible for local tumor treatments. Considering internal tumors with limited accessibility, medical gas plasmas help to enrich liquids with stable, low-dose oxidants ideal for intratumoral injection and lavage. Pre-clinical investigation of such liquids in numerous tumor entities and models in vitro and in vivo provided evidence of their clinical relevance, broadening the range of patients that could benefit from medical gas plasma therapy in the future. Likewise, the application of such liquids might be promising for recurrent BRAF(V600E) papillary thyroid carcinomas, resistant to adjuvant administration of radioiodine. From a redox biology point of view, studying redox-based approaches in thyroid carcinomas is particularly interesting, as they evolve in a highly oxidative environment requiring the capability to cope with large amounts of ROS/RNS. Knowledge on their behavior under different redox conditions is scarce. The present study aimed to clarify resistance, proliferative activity, and the oxidative stress response of human papillary thyroid cancer cells K1 after exposure to plasma-oxidized DMEM (oxDMEM). Cellular responses were also evaluated when treated with different dosages of hydrogen peroxide and the RNS donor sodium nitroprusside (SNP). Our findings outline plasma-oxidized liquids as a promising approach targeting BRAF(V600E) papillary thyroid carcinomas and extend current knowledge on the susceptibility of cells to undergo ROS/RNS-induced cell death.