scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Topic

Blisters

About: Blisters is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 980 publications have been published within this topic receiving 16229 citations.


Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Results suggest that local glucocorticosteroid decreases either the synthesis of GGT or its release from the tissue into the blister fluid, and protein concentrations and blister fluid volumes were significantly decreased in healing 3‐day blisters after steroid treatment.
Abstract: SUMMARY The effects of local glucocorticosteroid treatment on collagen biosynthesis and basement membrane components were studied in suction blisters in human abdominal skin. Pretreatment with clobetasol-17-propionate, applied three times a day for 4 days, did not affect the activity of galactosylhydroxylysyl glucosyltransferase (GGT) in fresh blisters but post-blistering treatment for 3 days with the steroid markedly inhibited the increase of this enzyme activity during the initial phases of re-epithelialization. The GGT activity was over 50% lower in steroidtreated blisters compared with control values. Protein concentrations and blister fluid volumes were also significantly decreased in healing 3-day blisters after steroid treatment. These results suggest that local glucocorticosteroid decreases either the synthesis of GGT or its release from the tissue into the blister fluid. The treatment did not affect the blister histology nor the early process of re-epithelialization. Immunohistochemically, type IV and V collagens and laminin of the basement membrane zone were similarly located in blisters of steroid-treated and placebo-treated skin, suggesting that local glucocorticosteroid does not affect the integrity of the basement membrane.

5 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
03 Jun 2020
TL;DR: In this paper, the effect of surface roughness on hydrogen-induced blister behavior in pure iron was explored using optical microscopy and microcomputerized tomography, and it was found that grinded surface exhibits higher roughness and compressive residual stress compared to those of polished surface.
Abstract: The effect of surface roughness on hydrogen-induced blister behavior in pure iron was explored using optical microscopy and microcomputerized tomography. Hydrogen was introduced into the samples by electrochemical precharging methods with various hydrogen charging times. It is found that grinded surface exhibits higher roughness and compressive residual stress compared to those of polished surface. With increasing hydrogen charging time, hydrogen-induced blister height, blister width and blister area fraction increase, regardless of the grinded surface and polished surface. Further, hydrogen blister height and width of grinded surface are comparative to polished surface under the same hydrogen charging time. However, the blister area fraction and the number of blister on polished surface are considerably higher than the grinded surface, indicating that polished surface is more susceptible to the formation of blisters than that of grinded surface, both of surface and interior of the samples. This is dominantly rationalized in terms of the suppression effect of hydrogen invasion in grinded surfaces due to their higher residual compressive stress and higher dislocation density.

5 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the impact of intrinsic stress on blister formation in multilayers by varying the Si thickness between 3.4-11 nm and changing the hydrogen ion exposure conditions.
Abstract: A Mo/Si multilayer film may blister under hydrogen exposure. In this paper, we investigate the impact of intrinsic stress on blister formation in multilayers by varying the Si thickness between 3.4-11 nm and changing the hydrogen ion exposure conditions. Increasing the thickness of a-Si is found to introduce a higher average compressive stress in the multilayer film. Measurements of the average film stress before and after hydrogen exposure did not reveal a correlation between stress relaxation and the observation of surface blisters. Comparing the experimentally observed blister size distribution to that predicted by elastic models of blistering due to pressure, and thin film buckling showed that increasing hydrogen pressure under the blister cap is the main cause of the observed blisters. It is also shown that hydrogen diffusion plays an essential role in the blister formation process as sufficient hydrogen is required to pressurize the blister.

5 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: MRI angiography may accurately detect blisters of the abdominal aortic aneurysm wall; surgical treatment is necessary for preventing imminent rupture.
Abstract: In order to evaluate the incidence, the diagnostic modalities and significance of blisters of the abdominal aortic aneurysm wall, in a retrospective review, 14 patients (2.6%) having these lesions were identified between 1983 and 1995. At preoperative examination, aortography had less accuracy (1 case = 20%) than CT scan (3 cases = 27.2%) or MRI angiography (6 cases = 85.7%) to detect blisters; others were discovered intraoperatively in the remaining four patients. Most blisters were located on the anterior or antero-lateral wall of aneurysms; its area ranged from 0.8 to 2.6 cm2. One patient with a suspected blister diagnosed at aortography, during chest physiotherapy for his COPD, presented sudden abdominal pain: at urgent laparotomy, an acute contained rupture of a large blister, without extraluminal blood loss, was found. All patients underwent aneurysm repair, with no postoperative deaths. Occurrence of rupture in one patient clearly indicates the natural course of aortic blisters. MRI angiography may accurately detect these lesions; surgical treatment is necessary for preventing imminent rupture.

5 citations


Network Information
Related Topics (5)
Ultraviolet light
49.4K papers, 843.1K citations
71% related
Dislocation
36.8K papers, 872.2K citations
69% related
Adhesion
28.8K papers, 801.9K citations
66% related
Scanning electron microscope
74.7K papers, 1.3M citations
66% related
Transmission electron microscopy
32.3K papers, 683.5K citations
65% related
Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
202353
2022133
202118
202036
201922
201846