Nagy A, Nagashima H, Cha S, Oxford G E, Zelles T, Peck A B, Humphreys-Beher M G
Department of Oral Biology, Semmelweis University Medical Center, Budapest, Hungary.
Diabetes. 2001 Sep;50(9):2100-4. doi: 10.2337/diabetes.50.9.2100.
Using the NOD mouse, a model for type 1 diabetes, we examined how reduced concentrations of epidermal growth factor (EGF) in the saliva, after onset of type 1 diabetes, affect oral wound healing. Diabetic NOD/LtJ mice on insulin therapy, prediabetic NOD/LtJ, and age- and sex-matched BALB/cJ mice were given a cutaneous tongue punch and allowed to undergo normal healing. With diabetes onset and a reduction in saliva-derived growth factor levels, the rate of tongue wound healing was reduced compared with nondiabetic NOD/LtJ and healthy BALB/cJ mice. Addition of exogenous EGF to the drinking water did not accelerate the rate of healing in BALB/cJ or prediabetic NOD/LtJ; however, diabetic NOD/LtJ mice exhibited accelerated wound healing similar to healthy mice. These results demonstrate that loss of growth factors from saliva is associated with profoundly reduced oral wound healing, suggesting that therapeutic treatment with topical delivery may be beneficial to patients with type 1 diabetes and oral wound complications.
我们使用1型糖尿病模型NOD小鼠,研究了1型糖尿病发病后唾液中表皮生长因子(EGF)浓度降低如何影响口腔伤口愈合。对接受胰岛素治疗的糖尿病NOD/LtJ小鼠、糖尿病前期NOD/LtJ小鼠以及年龄和性别匹配的BALB/cJ小鼠进行舌部皮肤打孔,并使其正常愈合。随着糖尿病的发病以及唾液衍生生长因子水平的降低,与非糖尿病NOD/LtJ小鼠和健康BALB/cJ小鼠相比,舌部伤口愈合速率降低。向饮用水中添加外源性EGF并未加快BALB/cJ小鼠或糖尿病前期NOD/LtJ小鼠的愈合速率;然而,糖尿病NOD/LtJ小鼠的伤口愈合加快,与健康小鼠相似。这些结果表明,唾液中生长因子的缺失与口腔伤口愈合显著降低有关,这表明局部递送的治疗方法可能对患有1型糖尿病和口腔伤口并发症的患者有益。