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Department of Anatomy, United Medical School, Guy's Hospital, London, England.
Macrophages are a source of many important growth factors which can act as wound mediators during tissue repair. The aim of this work was to find out if levels of ultrasound which accelerate repair could stimulate the release of fibroblast mitogenic factors from an established macrophage-like cell line (U937). The U937 cells were exposed in vitro to continuous ultrasound at a space average, temporal average intensity of 0.5 W/cm2 at either 0.75 MHz or 3.0 MHz, for 5 min. The macrophage-conditioned medium was removed either 30 min or 12 h after exposure, and placed on 3T3 fibroblast cultures. Fibroblast proliferation (defined here as increase in cell number) was assessed over a 5-day period. The results showed that 0.75 MHz ultrasound appeared to be effective in liberating preformed fibroblast affecting substances from the U937 cells, possibly by producing permeability changes, whereas 3.0 MHz ultrasound appeared to stimulate the cell's ability to synthesize and secrete fibroblast mitogenic factors.
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