The pro‐inflammatory environment in recalcitrant diabetic foot wounds

Jorge Berlanga Acosta(Centro de Ingeniería Genética y Biotecnología), Diana García del Barco(Centro de Ingeniería Genética y Biotecnología), Danay Cibrián(Centro de Ingeniería Genética y Biotecnología), William Savigne(Instituto de Cardiología y Cirugía Cardiovascular), Pedro López‐Saura(Cuban Neuroscience Center), Gerardo Guillén Nieto(Centro de Ingeniería Genética y Biotecnología), Gregory S. Schultz(University of Florida)
International Wound Journal
October 1, 2008
Cited by 188Open Access
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Abstract

Lower extremity ulceration is one of the serious and long-term diabetic complications rendering a significant social burden in terms of amputation and quality-of-life reduction. Diabetic patients experience a substantial wound-healing deficit. These lesions are featured by an exaggerated and prolonged inflammatory reaction with a significant impairment in local bacterial invasion control. Experimental and clinical evidences document the deleterious consequences of the wound's pro-inflammatory phenotype for the repair process. From a biochemical standpoint, hyperinflammation favours wound matrix degradation, thus, amplifying a pre-existing granulation tissue productive cells' invasiveness and recruitment deficit. Tumour necrosis factor perpetuates homing of inflammatory cells, triggers pro-apoptotic genes and impairs reepithelialisation. Advanced glycation end-products act in concert with inflammatory mediators and commit fibroblasts and vascular cells to apoptosis, contributing to granulation tissue demise. Therapeutic approaches aimed to downregulate hyperinflammation and/or attenuate glucolipotoxicity may assist in diabetic wound healing by dismantling downstream effectors. These medical interventions are demanded to reduce amputations in an expanding diabetic population.


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