Baumgardner K R, Osborne J W, Walton R E, Born J L
Department of Endodontics, University of Iowa, Iowa City 52246, USA.
J Endod. 1994 Dec;20(12):585-8. doi: 10.1016/S0099-2399(06)80081-6.
Tritiated misonidazole (3H-MISO) is a bioreductively activated marker which preferentially binds to cells with decreased oxygen tension (hypoxia). Detection of hypoxia may be an important indicator of metabolic imbalance. For 3H-MISO to be functional as a marker, normal oxygen (normoxic) levels must be distinguishable from increased hypoxic retention. This investigation characterized retention of 3H-MISO in: (a) normoxic pulp, (b) induced hypoxic pulp, and (c) reoxygenated hypoxic pulp. Rats were injected intraperitoneally with either 3H-MISO, unlabeled MISO, or saline, then divided into normoxic and hypoxic groups with appropriate controls. Normoxic animals were maintained at ambient pressure. Hypoxia was induced by placing animals in a hypobaric chamber at 0.5 atm. Pulps were then removed and prepared for liquid scintillation counting. Hypoxic pulps retained significantly more 3H-MISO than normoxic pulps (analysis of variance, p = 0.001). Hypoxic 3H-MISO retention was unaffected by subsequent, transient tissue reoxygenation. 3H-MISO detects changes in pulpal oxygen status that deviate from normal.