| Literature DB >> 24419138 |
Rosana S S Barreto1, Ricardo L C Albuquerque-Júnior1, Adriano A S Araújo1, Jackson R G S Almeida1, Márcio R V Santos1, André S Barreto1, Josimari M DeSantana1, Pollyana S Siqueira-Lima1, Jullyana S S Quintans1, Lucindo J Quintans-Júnior2.
Abstract
The search for more effective and lower cost therapeutic approaches for wound healing remains a challenge for modern medicine. In the search for new therapeutic options, plants and their metabolites are a great source of novel biomolecules. Among their constituents, the monoterpenes represent 90% of essential oils, and have a variety of structures with several activities such as antimicrobial, anti-inflammatory, antioxidant and wound healing. Based on that, and also due to the lack of reviews concerning the wound-healing activity of monoterpenes, we performed this systematic review-which provides an overview of their characteristics and mechanisms of action. In this search, the terms "terpenes", "monoterpenes", "wound healing" and "wound closure techniques" were used to retrieve articles published in LILACS, PUBMED and EMBASE until May 2013. Seven papers were found concerning the potential wound healing effect of five compouds (three monoterpenes and two iridoid derivatives) in preclinical studies. Among the products used for wound care, the films were the most studied pharmaceutical form. Monoterpenes are a class of compounds of great diversity of biological activities and therapeutic potential. The data reviewed here suggest that monoterpenes, although poorly studied in this context, are promising compounds for the treatment of chronic wound conditions.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24419138 PMCID: PMC6271983 DOI: 10.3390/molecules19010846
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1Flowchart of included studies. Studies were excluded according to the following exclusion criteria: studies in humans, studies of mixtures of substances or extracts from plants, review articles, meta-analyses, abstracts, conference proceedings, editorials/letters, case reports.
Characteristics of included studies.
| Authors, year, Country | Substance(s) | Animals | Doses, Concetration or Quantity | Pharmaceutical dosage forms | Model | Valued Parameter Settings | Results and Mechanisms | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Macroscopic | Microscopic | |||||||
| Mai L.M. | Borneol | Adult male | 4.5% and 0.7% | Vaselin-based ointment | Excision wound | Basic physiological conditions (body length, weight, food eaten, water intake); | Histological observation (HE) (skin appendages and collagen fibers quality); | This study found that the combination of Bismuth subgallate (BS) and Borneol (BO) and Vaseline had a synergistic effect in accelerating wound closure. |
| Riella K.R. | Thymol | Adult male and female | 1.2 mg | Collagen-based films | Excision wound | Wound contraction rates by digital caliper | Inflammatory response and profile inflammatory (HE); | The modulation of the leukocyte influx by thymol was associated to increased levels of macrophage migration inhibitory factor (MIF) in central nervous system; |
| Zhang K. | Genipin | 50 mg/mL | Silk fibroin/ hydroxybutyl chitosan | Excision wound | --------- | Histological examination of the inflammatory response; epithelization; proliferation of fibroblasts and collagen proliferation; blood vessels migration. | Greater proliferation of fibroblasts was observed in the nanofibers that was associated to a genipin crosslinked; | |
| Villegas L.F. | α-Terpineol | Male mice | 0.05 mL | Suspension | Incision wound | Tensile strength | --------- | Epi-α-bisabolol, α-bisabolol and α-terpineol showed significant |
| Chang W.H. | Genipin | Male | --------- | Wound dressing Membranes | Excision wound | Basic physiological conditions (infection) | Histological examination of the inflammatory response; epithelization and granulation tissue formation. | Genipin-crosslinked dressing membrane showed lower inflammatory reaction in the wound that may be due to the lower toxicity of its remaining residuesGenipin-crosslinked dressing membrane promotes early re-epithelialization, but mechanisms is not shown . |
| Lee S.W. | Aucubin | Male rats | 0.1% | Solution and based ointment | Incision wound | --------- | --------- | --------- |
Figure 2Structural formulae of (a) (−)-borneol, (b) thymol, (c) α-terpineol, (d) genipin and (e) aucubin.