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      Wound healing can be improved by (−)-epigallocatechin gallate through targeting Notch in streptozotocin-induced diabetic mice

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          Macrophages in skin injury and repair.

          After recruitment to the wound bed, monocytes differentiate into macrophages. Macrophages play a central role in all stages of wound healing and orchestrate the wound healing process. Their functional phenotype is dependent on the wound microenvironment, which changes during healing, hereby altering macrophage phenotype. During the early and short inflammatory phase macrophages exert pro-inflammatory functions like antigen-presenting, phagocytosis and the production of inflammatory cytokines and growth factors that facilitate the wound healing process. As such, the phenotype of wound macrophages in this phase is probably the classically activated or the so-called M1 phenotype. During the proliferative phase, macrophages stimulate proliferation of connective, endothelial and epithelial tissue directly and indirectly. Especially fibroblasts, keratinocytes and endothelial cells are stimulated by macrophages during this phase to induce and complete ECM formation, reepithelialization and neovascularization. Subsequently, macrophages can change the composition of the ECM both during angiogenesis and in the remodelling phase by release of degrading enzymes and by synthesizing ECM molecules. This suggests an important role for alternatively activated macrophages in this phase of wound healing. Pathological functioning of macrophages in the wound healing process can result in derailed wound healing, like the formation of ulcers, chronic wounds, hypertrophic scars and keloids. However, the exact role of macrophages in these processes is still incompletely understood. For treating wound repair disorders more should be elucidated on the role of macrophages in these conditions, especially their functional phenotype, to find more therapeutic opportunities. This review summarizes macrophage function in skin injury repair, thereby providing more insight in macrophage function in wound healing and possible interventions in this process. Copyright © 2011 Elsevier GmbH. All rights reserved.
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            Diabetic foot ulcers.

            Ulceration of the foot in diabetes is common and disabling and frequently leads to amputation of the leg. Mortality is high and healed ulcers often recur. The pathogenesis of foot ulceration is complex, clinical presentation variable, and management requires early expert assessment. Interventions should be directed at infection, peripheral ischaemia, and abnormal pressure loading caused by peripheral neuropathy and limited joint mobility. Despite treatment, ulcers readily become chronic wounds. Diabetic foot ulcers have been neglected in health-care research and planning, and clinical practice is based more on opinion than scientific fact. Furthermore, the pathological processes are poorly understood and poorly taught and communication between the many specialties involved is disjointed and insensitive to the needs of patients.
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              Pathogenesis and treatment of impaired wound healing in diabetes mellitus: new insights.

              Diabetic foot ulcers (DFUs) are one of the most common and serious complications of diabetes mellitus, as wound healing is impaired in the diabetic foot. Wound healing is a dynamic and complex biological process that can be divided into four partly overlapping phases: hemostasis, inflammation, proliferative and remodeling. These phases involve a large number of cell types, extracellular components, growth factors and cytokines. Diabetes mellitus causes impaired wound healing by affecting one or more biological mechanisms of these processes. Most often, it is triggered by hyperglycemia, chronic inflammation, micro- and macro-circulatory dysfunction, hypoxia, autonomic and sensory neuropathy, and impaired neuropeptide signaling. Research focused on thoroughly understanding these mechanisms would allow for specifically targeted treatment of diabetic foot ulcers. The main principles for DFU treatment are wound debridement, pressure off-loading, revascularization and infection management. New treatment options such as bioengineered skin substitutes, extracellular matrix proteins, growth factors, and negative pressure wound therapy, have emerged as adjunctive therapies for ulcers. Future treatment strategies include stem cell-based therapies, delivery of gene encoding growth factors, application of angiotensin receptors analogs and neuropeptides like substance P, as well as inhibition of inflammatory cytokines. This review provides an outlook of the pathophysiology in diabetic wound healing and summarizes the established and adjunctive treatment strategies, as well as the future therapeutic options for the treatment of DFUs.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                The FASEB Journal
                The FASEB Journal
                FASEB
                0892-6638
                1530-6860
                January 2019
                January 2019
                : 33
                : 1
                : 953-964
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Key Laboratory of Pu-erh Tea Science, Ministry of Education, Yunnan Agricultural University, Kunming, China;
                [2 ]College of Science, Yunnan Agricultural University, Kunming, China;
                [3 ]College of Food Science and Technology, Yunnan Agricultural University, Kunming, China;
                [4 ]State Key Laboratory for Conservation and Utilization of Bio-Resources in Yunnan, Kunming, China
                Article
                10.1096/fj.201800337R
                30070931
                82e2f965-ac8c-4826-828f-7a7a11decece
                © 2019
                History

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