Literature DB >> 22025904

Electrical Activation of Wound-Healing Pathways.

Min Zhao1, Josef Penninger, Roslyn Rivkah Isseroff.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Effective wound healing has been a lasting and challenging topic in health care. Various strategies have been used to accelerate and perfect the healing process. One such strategy has involved the application of an exogenous electrical stimulus to chronic wounds with the aim of stimulating healing responses. THE PROBLEM: The biology of electric stimulation to instigate healing, however, is very poorly understood. How does electric stimulation induce healing responses? BASIC/CLINICAL SCIENCE ADVANCES: Recent research shows that the electric fields (EFs) activate multiple signaling pathways that are critical for wound healing. Importantly, the EFs provide a powerful, sometimes an overriding, directional signal for cell migration in wound healing. Unlike other stimuli, EFs have the intrinsic property of being directional. The EF-directed cell migration (electrotaxis/galvanotaxis) appears to be a consequence of EF-induced polarized signaling of epidermal growth factor receptors, integrins, and phosphoinositide 3 kinase/Pten, and may be mediated by protein kinase C, intracellular Ca(2+), and cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP). Because directional cell migration is a key component in wound healing, galvanotaxis may represent an important mechanism of wound healing. CLINICAL CARE RELEVANCE: With the constantly enlarging diabetic and aging population, chronic or nonhealing wounds pose increasing health and economic problems, and currently there is no effective therapy available. Electric stimulation activates important intracellular signaling pathways that are polarized in the EF direction, resulting in enhanced and stimulated directional cell migration. Electric stimulation offers a novel approach to achieve better and accelerated wound healing.
CONCLUSION: Experimental evidence suggests a significant role of endogenous EFs in cell migration in wound healing. Most importantly, EFs are a very powerful signal to direct cell migration. Electric stimulation therefore may represent a promising and unique strategy to induce cell and tissue growth in a directional manner, to enhance wound healing, and to achieve better wound healing.

Entities:  

Year:  2010        PMID: 22025904      PMCID: PMC3198837          DOI: 10.1089/9781934854013.567

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Adv Skin Wound Care        ISSN: 1527-7941            Impact factor:   2.347


  37 in total

Review 1.  Cutaneous wound healing.

Authors:  A J Singer; R A Clark
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  1999-09-02       Impact factor: 91.245

2.  Wound healing with electric potential.

Authors:  Anna Huttenlocher; Alan Rick Horwitz
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2007-01-18       Impact factor: 91.245

3.  Microneedle array for measuring wound generated electric fields.

Authors:  E V Mukerjee; R R Isseroff; R Nuccitelli; S D Collins; R L Smith
Journal:  Conf Proc IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc       Date:  2006

Review 4.  Dynamic optimization of chronic migraine treatment: current and future options.

Authors:  Ninan T Mathew
Journal:  Neurology       Date:  2009-02-03       Impact factor: 9.910

Review 5.  Effect of low-intensity direct current on the healing of chronic wounds: a literature review.

Authors:  A Ramadan; M Elsaidy; R Zyada
Journal:  J Wound Care       Date:  2008-07       Impact factor: 2.072

Review 6.  Biological mediators of wound healing: the importance of the big picture.

Authors:  Ramin Mostofi Zadeh Farahani
Journal:  Int Wound J       Date:  2008-06       Impact factor: 3.315

7.  beta4 integrin and epidermal growth factor coordinately regulate electric field-mediated directional migration via Rac1.

Authors:  Christine E Pullar; Brian S Baier; Yoshinobu Kariya; Alan J Russell; Basil A J Horst; M Peter Marinkovich; R Rivkah Isseroff
Journal:  Mol Biol Cell       Date:  2006-08-16       Impact factor: 4.138

Review 8.  Electrical stimulation for wound healing: a review of evidence from in vitro studies, animal experiments, and clinical trials.

Authors:  Luther C Kloth
Journal:  Int J Low Extrem Wounds       Date:  2005-03       Impact factor: 2.057

9.  A pulsing electric field (PEF) increases human chondrocyte proliferation through a transduction pathway involving nitric oxide signaling.

Authors:  Robert J Fitzsimmons; Stephen L Gordon; James Kronberg; Timothy Ganey; Arthur A Pilla
Journal:  J Orthop Res       Date:  2008-06       Impact factor: 3.494

10.  The effect of neuromuscular electrical stimulation of the infraspinatus on shoulder external rotation force production after rotator cuff repair surgery.

Authors:  Michael M Reinold; Leonard C Macrina; Kevin E Wilk; Jeffrey R Dugas; E Lyle Cain; James R Andrews
Journal:  Am J Sports Med       Date:  2008-08-29       Impact factor: 6.202

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  16 in total

Review 1.  In vitro and in vivo neuronal electrotaxis: a potential mechanism for restoration?

Authors:  Ali Jahanshahi; Lisa-Maria Schönfeld; Evi Lemmens; Sven Hendrix; Yasin Temel
Journal:  Mol Neurobiol       Date:  2013-11-16       Impact factor: 5.590

2.  Bioelectric Field Enhancement: The Influence on Membrane Potential and Cell Migration In Vitro.

Authors:  Marcy C Purnell; Terence J Skrinjar
Journal:  Adv Wound Care (New Rochelle)       Date:  2016-12-01       Impact factor: 4.730

Review 3.  Electrical Stimulation of Wound Healing: A Review of Animal Experimental Evidence.

Authors:  Giti Torkaman
Journal:  Adv Wound Care (New Rochelle)       Date:  2014-02-01       Impact factor: 4.730

4.  The analgesic effect of electrostimulation (WoundEL®) in the treatment of leg ulcers.

Authors:  Pauline Leloup; Pascal Toussaint; Jean-Paul Lembelembe; Philippe Célérier; Hervé Maillard
Journal:  Int Wound J       Date:  2014-02-12       Impact factor: 3.315

5.  Direct Current Electric Field Coordinates the Migration of BV2 Microglia via ERK/GSK3β/Cofilin Signaling Pathway.

Authors:  Yuxiao Ma; Chun Yang; Qian Liang; Zhenghui He; Weiji Weng; Jin Lei; Loren Skudder-Hill; Jiyao Jiang; Junfeng Feng
Journal:  Mol Neurobiol       Date:  2022-04-01       Impact factor: 5.682

6.  Electroceutical Management of Bacterial Biofilms and Surgical Infection.

Authors:  Chandan K Sen; Shomita S Mathew-Steiner; Amitava Das; Vishnu Baba Sundaresan; Sashwati Roy
Journal:  Antioxid Redox Signal       Date:  2020-07-10       Impact factor: 8.401

7.  Expression of integrins to control migration direction of electrotaxis.

Authors:  Kan Zhu; Yoko Takada; Kenichi Nakajima; Yaohui Sun; Jianxin Jiang; Yan Zhang; Qunli Zeng; Yoshikazu Takada; Min Zhao
Journal:  FASEB J       Date:  2019-05-22       Impact factor: 5.834

Review 8.  Electrical stimulation as a novel tool for regulating cell behavior in tissue engineering.

Authors:  Cen Chen; Xue Bai; Yahui Ding; In-Seop Lee
Journal:  Biomater Res       Date:  2019-12-05

9.  Individual differences in transcranial electrical stimulation current density.

Authors:  Michael J Russell; Theodore Goodman; Ronald Pierson; Shane Shepherd; Qiang Wang; Bennett Groshong; David F Wiley
Journal:  J Biomed Res       Date:  2013-10-25

Review 10.  Electrically stimulated cell migration and its contribution to wound healing.

Authors:  Guangping Tai; Michael Tai; Min Zhao
Journal:  Burns Trauma       Date:  2018-07-09
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