AI Article Synopsis

  • Chronic non-healing wounds in diabetic patients, especially diabetic foot, can result in serious complications like amputations due to an ongoing cycle of factors like inflammation, infection, and impaired blood flow.
  • The complexity of the immune environment worsened by high blood sugar complicates effective wound healing, leading researchers to seek remedies for chronic wounds.
  • Recently, therapeutic gases such as Oxygen, Nitric oxide, and others have shown promise in promoting healing by improving blood flow, reducing inflammation, and fighting infection, offering new strategies for treating diabetic wounds.

Article Abstract

Chronic non-healing wounds are a common consequence of skin ulceration in diabetic patients, with severe cases such as diabetic foot even leading to amputations. The interplay between pathological factors like hypoxia-ischemia, chronic inflammation, bacterial infection, impaired angiogenesis, and accumulation of advanced glycosylation end products (AGEs), resulting from the dysregulation of the immune microenvironment caused by hyperglycemia, establishes an unending cycle that hampers wound healing. However, there remains a dearth of sufficient and effective approaches to break this vicious cycle within the complex immune microenvironment. Consequently, numerous scholars have directed their research efforts towards addressing chronic diabetic wound repair. In recent years, gases including Oxygen (O), Nitric oxide (NO), Hydrogen (H), Hydrogen sulfide (HS), Ozone (O), Carbon monoxide (CO) and Nitrous oxide (NO), along with gas-releasing materials associated with them have emerged as promising therapeutic solutions due to their ability to regulate angiogenesis, intracellular oxygenation levels, exhibit antibacterial and anti-inflammatory effects while effectively minimizing drug residue-induced damage and circumventing drug resistance issues. In this review, we discuss the latest advances in the mechanisms of action and treatment of these gases and related gas-releasing materials in diabetic wound repair. We hope that this review can provide different ideas for the future design and application of gas therapy for chronic diabetic wounds.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d4bm00351aDOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • Chronic non-healing wounds in diabetic patients, especially diabetic foot, can result in serious complications like amputations due to an ongoing cycle of factors like inflammation, infection, and impaired blood flow.
  • The complexity of the immune environment worsened by high blood sugar complicates effective wound healing, leading researchers to seek remedies for chronic wounds.
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