| Literature DB >> 31275545 |
Luis Cañedo-Dorantes1, Mara Cañedo-Ayala2.
Abstract
Experimental work of the last two decades has revealed the general steps of the wound healing process. This complex network has been organized in three sequential and overlapping steps. The first step of the inflammatory phase is an immediate response to injury; primary sensory neurons sense injury and send danger signals to the brain, to stop bleeding and start inflammation. The following target of the inflammatory phase, led by the peripheral blood mononuclear cells, is to eliminate the pathogens and clean the wound. Once this is completed, the inflammatory phase is resolved and homeostasis is restored. The aim of the proliferative phase, the second phase, is to repair wound damage and begin tissue remodeling. Fibroplasia, reepithelialization, angiogenesis, and peripheral nerve repair are the central actions of this phase. Lastly, the objective of the final phase is to complete tissue remodeling and restore skin integrity. This review provides present day information regarding the status of the participant cells, extracellular matrix, cytokines, chemokines, and growth factors, as well as their interactions with the microenvironment during the wound healing process.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31275545 PMCID: PMC6582859 DOI: 10.1155/2019/3706315
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Inflam ISSN: 2042-0099
Figure 1See text.
Figure 2Neutrophil accumulation in the wound increases during the initial inflammatory phase and starts declining 4 days later until the end of the week [49]. Macrophages increase their numbers during the inflammation phase, reach maximum concentration during the proliferation phase, and decline progressively during the remodeling phase, being the most abundant cell in all phases of wound repair [63, 115]. Lymphocytes start increasing their number after injury and reach a plateau at day 4 that continues to be present until the last phase. The skin resident cell number in dendritic cells, mast cells, Trm, and Treg rm is not known, but the presence in the skin of a large population of T memory cells protects the skin against reinfection [99]; further research will be required to clarify their functions in the wound healing process. The approximated time of each of the wound healing phases is illustrated in the bars at the bottom of the graphic [41].
Figure 3See Sections 5.4.1to 5.4.4.