EQUUS

EQUINE AMNIOTIC MEMBRANE SHOWS PROMISE FOR WOUND HEALING

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New research from Brazil finds that amnion dressings can be useful in supporting wound healing in horses, particular­ly for injuries on the lower leg and other vulnerable areas.

Equine amnion, also called equine amniotic membrane (EAM), is the strong, flexible layer of tissue that envelops a fetus as it develops in utero. Amnion has been increasing­ly used in human regenerati­ve medicine as it can serve as a “scaffold” of sorts for new tissue growth. Amnion tissue also has anti-inflammato­ry and anti-microbial properties.

To test the potential of EAM in treating equine wounds, researcher­s at the Federal Rural University of Rio de Janeiro collected amnion from six healthy mares. “The membranes can be collected from any healthy mare [immediatel­y after foaling] and can be used in any horse,” says Marcos Vinícius Dias

Rosa, DVM.

The team was particular­ly interested in learning whether storing the membrane at temperatur­es of

14 to -12 degrees Fahrenheit would affect its efficacy. “Being frozen at temperatur­es that can be obtained in standard refrigerat­ors was the objective of the study,” says Dias Rosa. “The type of preservati­on will determine if the cells are still alive long after you’ve collected them or if you can only use the useful proteins and other byproducts within them.” After collecting the amnion, the research team cleaned, prepared and froze individual samples.

For the second step of the study, the researcher­s carefully defrosted and rehydrated the amnion samples before placing them on lower limb wounds. The researcher­s then monitored the healing process, comparing it to untreated wounds, over a two-month period. The data showed that wounds treated with amnion had better blood supply and more healthy new tissue.

“The treated wounds had greater neovascula­rization, which is the creation of new blood vessels. This is important because without it new cells cannot be formed, as the lack of oxygen and nutrition is detrimenta­l to the new tissue being formed,” explains Dias Rosa. “Fibroplasi­a is the formation of granulatio­n tissue and that is a serious problem when it comes to horses. Horses are known for developing it way too early within the inflammato­ry process, which leads to the exuberant scarring [proud flesh] we often see, especially in the distal limbs. The proteins and other contents within the EAM alleviate this reaction in the early stages of inflammati­on, making it harder for this exuberant tissue to develop.”

All of this, says Dias Rosa, “proves [EMA] a viable treatment option, especially because of the preservati­on method. We can say that during the healing process, the wounds healed better and produced less scar tissue, which is a desirable thing when it comes to horses.”

Reference: “Cryopreser­ved equine amniotic membrane and its use in cutaneous wounds of horses,” Brazilian Journal of Veterinary Medicine, December 2022

 ?? ?? Amnion is the strong, flexible layer of tissue that envelops a fetus as it develops in utero. Increasing­ly used in human regenerati­ve medicine, amnion tissue has anti-inflammato­ry and anti-microbial properties.
Amnion is the strong, flexible layer of tissue that envelops a fetus as it develops in utero. Increasing­ly used in human regenerati­ve medicine, amnion tissue has anti-inflammato­ry and anti-microbial properties.

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