Velander Patrik, Theopold Christoph, Hirsch Tobias, Bleiziffer Oliver, Zuhaili Baraa, Fossum Magdalena, Hoeller Daniela, Gheerardyn Raphael, Chen Michael, Visovatti Scott, Svensson Henry, Yao Feng, Eriksson Elof
Laboratory of Tissue Repair and Gene Transfer, Division of Plastic Surgery, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA.
Wound Repair Regen. 2008 Mar-Apr;16(2):288-93. doi: 10.1111/j.1524-475X.2008.00367.x.
Diabetic wounds result in significant morbidity, prolonged hospitalization, and enormous health-care expenses. Pigs have been shown to have wound healing resembling that in humans. The aim of this study was to develop a large-animal model for diabetic wound healing. Diabetes was induced by streptozotocin injection in Yorkshire pigs. Full-thickness wounds were created and dressed with a sealed chamber. Nondiabetic pigs with or without high glucose wound fluid concentration served as controls. Glucose concentration in serum and wound fluid was measured and collected. Wound contraction was monitored, and biopsies were obtained for measurement of reepithelialization. Wound fluid was analyzed for insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1), platelet-derived growth factor, and transforming growth factor. Glucose concentration in wound fluid initially followed serum levels and then decreased to undetectable on day 9. Reepithelialization was significantly delayed in diabetic pigs. In nondiabetic pigs, wounds treated in a local hyperglycemic environment, and thus excluding the effects of systemic hyperglycemia, showed no difference in wound closure compared with controls. This suggests that delayed wound healing in diabetes is not induced by local high-glucose concentration itself. Analysis of growth factor expression showed a marked reduction in IGF-1 in the diabetic wounds. Diabetic pigs have impaired healing that is accompanied by a reduction of IGF-1 in the healing wound and is not due to the local hyperglycemia condition itself.
糖尿病伤口会导致严重的发病率、延长住院时间并产生巨额医疗费用。已证明猪的伤口愈合情况与人类相似。本研究的目的是建立一种用于糖尿病伤口愈合的大型动物模型。通过向约克夏猪注射链脲佐菌素诱导糖尿病。制作全层伤口并用密封腔室覆盖。有或无高糖伤口液浓度的非糖尿病猪作为对照。测量并收集血清和伤口液中的葡萄糖浓度。监测伤口收缩情况,并获取活检样本以测量再上皮化。分析伤口液中的胰岛素样生长因子-1(IGF-1)、血小板衍生生长因子和转化生长因子。伤口液中的葡萄糖浓度最初跟随血清水平,然后在第9天降至检测不到的水平。糖尿病猪的再上皮化明显延迟。在非糖尿病猪中,在局部高血糖环境下处理的伤口(从而排除全身高血糖的影响)与对照相比,伤口闭合情况无差异。这表明糖尿病中伤口愈合延迟并非由局部高糖浓度本身引起。生长因子表达分析显示糖尿病伤口中IGF-1明显减少。糖尿病猪的愈合受损,伴有愈合伤口中IGF-1减少,且并非由局部高血糖状况本身所致。