Photodynamic therapy of arteries. A novel approach for treatment of experimental intimal hyperplasia.

1992 
BACKGROUNDPhotodynamic therapy (PDT) uses light activation of otherwise nontoxic dyes for the production of reactive oxygen species that cause cell injury and death.METHODS AND RESULTSThe inhibition of intimal hyperplasia (IH) by PDT was studied in the balloon injury model of the rat carotid artery. Chloroaluminum-sulfonated phthalocyanine (CASPc) was the drug chosen for PDT because it does not produce skin photosensitivity and has a high absorption peak of light at 675 nm, a wavelength with good tissue penetration. A pilot study indicated that CASPc administration with laser radiant exposure of 100 J/cm2 resulted in a homogeneous, circumferential effect on the whole artery. Male Sprague-Dawley rats received the balloon catheter injury to the left common carotid artery (day 0) and were equally divided into two groups. Nine rats received either CASPc (5 mg/kg i.v., n = 6) or saline (n = 3) at day 2, before IH was present, and nine rats received CASPc or saline in the same manner on day 7, when IH was alrea...
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