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Original Research

Quantification of Dermal Microcirculatory Changes after Topical Administration of Capsaicin: A Randomized Placebo-Controlled Study in 46 Subjects

ORCID Icon, , , , &
Pages 1673-1678 | Received 21 Mar 2022, Accepted 13 Jun 2022, Published online: 14 Jul 2022
 

Abstract

Background

Dermal blood flow is crucial for wound healing and survival of flaps in dermatologic surgery. To improve flap viability in cases of compromised perfusion topical agents can easily be applied. The aim of this placebo-controlled study was to characterize changes of DBF in healthy subjects by quantitatively assessing perfusion dynamics after application of capsaicin to establish a reference for measurements at injured sites.

Methods

In 46 healthy subjects perfusion dynamics after local application with capsaicin and placebo was noninvasively assessed, determining cutaneous oxygen saturation, relative hemoglobin count and blood flow using an Oxygen-to-See device.

Results

A significant raise in superficial (162% p = 0.000) and deep (144%, p = 0.000) skin oxygenation after 30 min was provoked. A highly significant raise in measurements of flow and velocity was present in superficial (523%, p = 0.000) and deep (242%, p = 0.000) sites.

Conclusion

With the introduced model applied to observe changes in parameters of dermal blood flow in healthy subjects the authors can reliably monitor effects of topically administered capsaicin. This baseline can be used as reference for further studies in the settings of endangered flap survival or critically perfused wounds as has been proven in animal studies.

Disclosure statement

The authors declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and publication of this article.

Funding

This research received no grant from any funding agency in the public, commercial or not-for-profit sectors.

Ethical approval

Study approved by Eberhard-Karl University Tuebingen, Institutional Review Board (#496/2013BO1). Written informed consent was obtained from the patients for their anonymized information to be published in this article.

Contributorship

All authors made a substantial contribution to the concept, design and analysis of the study, were involved in drafting and revisiting the article and approved the final version to be published.

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