• Wound Repair Regen · Oct 1996

    Removal of necrotic tissue with an ananain-based enzyme-debriding preparation.

    • E M Skrabut, P A Hebda, J A Samuels, S M Richards, T Edmunds, M F Cunneen, C A Vaccaro, and J M McPherson.
    • Genzyme Tissue Repair, Framingham, MA, USA.
    • Wound Repair Regen. 1996 Oct 1; 4 (4): 433-43.

    AbstractAn enzymatic debriding preparation was formulated with purified enzyme derived from a crude pineapple stem extract. The primary component of this preparation was the sulfhydryl protease ananain which represented >/=85% of the proteolytic activity. The remaining proteolytic activity in the preparation was contributed by a co-purifying homologous cysteine protease comosain. Taken together these two proteases provided a protein purity of greater than 95% as judged by sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. This ananain-based enzyme preparation exhibited both gelatinolytic and fibrinolytic activity in vitro. Ananain-based enzyme preparation was formulated in a hydrophilic cream vehicle at concentrations ranging from 115 to 260 U/gm vehicle. Ananain-based enzyme preparation formulated in this fashion is referred to as Vianain debriding agent. Vianain was applied to partial-thickness cutaneous burn wounds produced in the skin of domestic pigs. A maximum of two 4-hour applications of Vianain provided complete debridement of eschar from the partial-thickness burn wounds as judged by light and electron microscopic analyses of biopsy specimens harvested before and after debridement. Wounds debrided with Vianain exhibited more rapid reepithelialization as compared with wounds that were not debrided. Wounds on pigs that were hyperimmunized to ananain-based enzyme preparation before burning and debridement with Vianain exhibited a similar enhancement in reepithelialization as compared with wounds treated with vehicle alone. The capacity of Vianain to debride necrotic tissue was also evaluated in a guinea pig ischemic ulcer model. Full-thickness ischemic lesions were created on the back of guinea pigs. Vianain was applied to the hardened necrotic tissue for 6 hours per day for up to a maximum of 5 days. Complete debridement of these wounds was accomplished within 4 to 5 days. Treatment of ischemic cutaneous ulcerations in this animal model with two commercially available enzyme-debriding agents provided little or no debridement of the necrotic tissue. In vitro, Vianain treatment of surgically debrided human tissue samples, obtained from patients with burn injury or cutaneous ulcers, showed that the protease preparation was effective in rapidly digesting these necrotic tissues.

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