Wound Repair Regen. 2009 Jul-Aug; 17(4): 559-68Song B, Zhang W, Guo S, Han Y, Zhang Y, Ma F, Zhang L, Lu KHypertrophic scarring remains a major problem for patients who have suffered from surgeries or burns. Vascularization plays an important role in the early phase of hypertrophic scarring. Therefore, the inhibition of angiogenesis might be used as a preventive strategy. In this study, we assessed the effect of anti-angiogenesis resulting from adenovirus-mediated METH1 (metalloprotease and thrombospondin1) gene expression on the hypertrophic scar formation in a rabbit ear model of hypertrophic scarring. We first investigated the number of microvessel and microcirculatory perfusion in untreated scars on days 10, 30, 60, and 90 after epithelialization. Then, we examined the effect of anti-angiogenesis by adenovirus-mediated METH1 expression on hypertrophic scar formation by calculating the scar elevation index, counting the microvessel and argyrophilic nucleolar organizer region particle, and detecting the amount of collagen on days 30 and 60 after treatment. We found that untreated scar tissues at the proliferative phase (days 10-60 after epithelialization) had a significantly higher density of microvessel and microcirculatory perfusion than those at the mature phase (day 90 after epithelization) (both p