Abstract: | To assess laser modulation of wound healing, full-thickness cutaneous wounds were produced in the backs of pigs, and subjected to treatment with helium-neon laser. For comparison, some wounds were treated with non-laser energy source (a tungsten light) or left untreated as controls. Type I and type III procollagen mRNA levels were determined in the wounds by molecular hybridization with cDNA probes. The results indicated that type I and type III mRNA levels were markedly increased at days 17 and 28 of the healing in wounds treated with He-Ne laser, when compared to control or tungsten light-treated wounds. The results suggest that helium-neon laser stimulates wound healing by enhancing procollagen gene expression. These observations may have relevance to previous clinical studies suggesting that helium-neon laser stimulates wound healing. |