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比较性伤口愈合--小动物临床患者是否为人类伤口愈合研究的改进型转化模型?

Comparative wound healing--are the small animal veterinarian's clinical patients an improved translational model for human wound healing research?

机构信息

Department of Clinical Studies and Animal Biology, School of Veterinary Medicine, The University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 19104-4539, USA.

出版信息

Wound Repair Regen. 2013 May-Jun;21(3):372-81. doi: 10.1111/wrr.12049. Epub 2013 Apr 29.

Abstract

Despite intensive research efforts into understanding the pathophysiology of both chronic wounds and scar formation, and the development of wound care strategies to target both healing extremes, problematic wounds in human health care remain a formidable challenge. Although valuable fundamental information regarding the pathophysiology of problematic wounds can be gained from in vitro investigations and in vivo studies performed in laboratory animal models, the lack of concordance with human pathophysiology has been cited as a major impediment to translational research in human wound care. Therefore, the identification of superior clinical models for both chronic wounds and scarring disorders should be a high priority for scientists who work in the field of human wound healing research. To be successful, translational wound healing research should function as an intellectual ecosystem in which information flows from basic science researchers using in vitro and in vivo models to clinicians and back again from the clinical investigators to the basic scientists. Integral to the efficiency of this process is the incorporation of models which can accurately predict clinical success. The aim of this review is to describe the potential advantages and limitations of using clinical companion animals (primarily dogs and cats) as translational models for cutaneous wound healing research by describing comparative aspects of wound healing in these species, common acute and chronic cutaneous wounds in clinical canine and feline patients, and the infrastructure that currently exists in veterinary medicine which may facilitate translational studies and simultaneously benefit both veterinary and human wound care patients.

摘要

尽管人们在深入研究慢性伤口和瘢痕形成的病理生理学方面付出了巨大努力,并开发了针对这两种极端情况的伤口护理策略,但在人类医疗保健中,仍然存在着棘手的伤口问题。虽然可以通过在实验室动物模型中进行的体外研究和体内研究获得有关病理性伤口的宝贵基础知识,但缺乏与人类病理生理学的一致性被认为是阻碍人类伤口护理转化研究的主要障碍。因此,对于从事人类伤口愈合研究领域的科学家来说,确定用于慢性伤口和瘢痕形成障碍的更好的临床模型应该是当务之急。为了取得成功,转化性伤口愈合研究应该作为一个知识生态系统运作,其中信息从使用体外和体内模型的基础科学研究人员流向临床医生,然后再从临床研究人员流向基础科学家。该过程的效率与整合能够准确预测临床成功的模型密切相关。本文的目的是通过描述这些物种的伤口愈合比较方面、临床犬猫常见的急性和慢性皮肤伤口以及当前兽医医学中可能促进转化研究并同时使兽医和人类伤口护理患者受益的基础设施,来描述将临床伴生动物(主要是犬和猫)用作皮肤伤口愈合研究的转化模型的潜在优势和局限性。

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