Experimental Models Used in Fat Grafting Research for Volume Augmentation in Soft Tissue Reconstruction

As the popularity of fat grafting research increases, animal models are being used as the source of pre-clinical experimental information for discovery and to enhance techniques. To date, animal models used in this research have not been compared to provide a standardized model. We analyzed publicat...

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Main Authors: Jorge Lujan-Hernandez, Raghu Appasani, Kylee Sullivan, Leah Siegel-Reamer, Janice F. Lalikos
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Korean Society of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgeons 2017-09-01
Series:Archives of Plastic Surgery
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.e-aps.org/upload/pdf/aps-2017-44-5-361.pdf
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spelling doaj-c4edd1bb49c34c9f9b40e26a1742c3ee2020-11-24T22:04:07ZengKorean Society of Plastic and Reconstructive SurgeonsArchives of Plastic Surgery2234-61632234-61712017-09-0144536136910.5999/aps.2017.44.5.361840Experimental Models Used in Fat Grafting Research for Volume Augmentation in Soft Tissue ReconstructionJorge Lujan-HernandezRaghu AppasaniKylee SullivanLeah Siegel-ReamerJanice F. LalikosAs the popularity of fat grafting research increases, animal models are being used as the source of pre-clinical experimental information for discovery and to enhance techniques. To date, animal models used in this research have not been compared to provide a standardized model. We analyzed publications from 1968–2015 to compare published accounts of animal models in fat grafting research. Data collected included: species used, graft characteristics (donor tissue, recipient area, amount injected, injection technique), time of sacrifice and quantification methods. Mice were most commonly used (56% of studies), with the “athymic nude” strain utilized most frequently (44%). Autologous fat was the most common source of grafted tissue (52%). Subcutaneous dorsum was the most common recipient site (51%). On average, 0.80±0.60 mL of fat was grafted. A single bolus technique was used in 57% of studies. Fat volume assessment was typically completed at the end of the study, occurring at less than 1 week to one year. Graft volume was quantified by weight (63%), usually in conjunction with another analysis. The results demonstrate the current heterogeneity of animal models in this research. We propose that the research community reach a consensus to allow better comparison of techniques and results. One example is the model used in our laboratory and others; this model is described in detail. Eventually, larger animal models may better translate to the human condition but, given increased financial costs and animal facility capability, should be explored when data obtained from small animal studies is exhausted or inconclusive.http://www.e-aps.org/upload/pdf/aps-2017-44-5-361.pdfModels, animalResearchResearch designAdipose tissueFat grafting
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jorge Lujan-Hernandez
Raghu Appasani
Kylee Sullivan
Leah Siegel-Reamer
Janice F. Lalikos
spellingShingle Jorge Lujan-Hernandez
Raghu Appasani
Kylee Sullivan
Leah Siegel-Reamer
Janice F. Lalikos
Experimental Models Used in Fat Grafting Research for Volume Augmentation in Soft Tissue Reconstruction
Archives of Plastic Surgery
Models, animal
Research
Research design
Adipose tissue
Fat grafting
author_facet Jorge Lujan-Hernandez
Raghu Appasani
Kylee Sullivan
Leah Siegel-Reamer
Janice F. Lalikos
author_sort Jorge Lujan-Hernandez
title Experimental Models Used in Fat Grafting Research for Volume Augmentation in Soft Tissue Reconstruction
title_short Experimental Models Used in Fat Grafting Research for Volume Augmentation in Soft Tissue Reconstruction
title_full Experimental Models Used in Fat Grafting Research for Volume Augmentation in Soft Tissue Reconstruction
title_fullStr Experimental Models Used in Fat Grafting Research for Volume Augmentation in Soft Tissue Reconstruction
title_full_unstemmed Experimental Models Used in Fat Grafting Research for Volume Augmentation in Soft Tissue Reconstruction
title_sort experimental models used in fat grafting research for volume augmentation in soft tissue reconstruction
publisher Korean Society of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgeons
series Archives of Plastic Surgery
issn 2234-6163
2234-6171
publishDate 2017-09-01
description As the popularity of fat grafting research increases, animal models are being used as the source of pre-clinical experimental information for discovery and to enhance techniques. To date, animal models used in this research have not been compared to provide a standardized model. We analyzed publications from 1968–2015 to compare published accounts of animal models in fat grafting research. Data collected included: species used, graft characteristics (donor tissue, recipient area, amount injected, injection technique), time of sacrifice and quantification methods. Mice were most commonly used (56% of studies), with the “athymic nude” strain utilized most frequently (44%). Autologous fat was the most common source of grafted tissue (52%). Subcutaneous dorsum was the most common recipient site (51%). On average, 0.80±0.60 mL of fat was grafted. A single bolus technique was used in 57% of studies. Fat volume assessment was typically completed at the end of the study, occurring at less than 1 week to one year. Graft volume was quantified by weight (63%), usually in conjunction with another analysis. The results demonstrate the current heterogeneity of animal models in this research. We propose that the research community reach a consensus to allow better comparison of techniques and results. One example is the model used in our laboratory and others; this model is described in detail. Eventually, larger animal models may better translate to the human condition but, given increased financial costs and animal facility capability, should be explored when data obtained from small animal studies is exhausted or inconclusive.
topic Models, animal
Research
Research design
Adipose tissue
Fat grafting
url http://www.e-aps.org/upload/pdf/aps-2017-44-5-361.pdf
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