| Literature DB >> 34429664 |
Renni Yuniati1, Innelya Innelya2, Arti Rachmawati2, Harold Jefferson Matthew Charlex2, Alfi Rahmatika2, Matthew Brian Khrisna1, Farmaditya E P Mundhofir3, K Heri Nugroho Hario Seno4, Tri Nur Kristina5.
Abstract
PURPOSE: One of the most serious and devastating complications of diabetes mellitus is diabetic ulcers. They are difficult to treat and often result in limb loss. Topical sucralfate and platelet-rich plasma have the potential to improve the healing outcomes of chronic ulcers, including diabetic ulcers. This research aims to determine the effectiveness of sucralfate and platelet-rich plasma therapy for the improvement of diabetic ulcer wound healing. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Ninety Wistar rats were used in this study and were classified into five groups. Four of the five groups were diabetic induced and were treated with topical sucralfate only, platelet-rich plasma only, combination of topical sucralfate and platelet-rich plasma, and diabetic control group which received standard therapy only. The non-diabetic control group did not receive any therapy. We observed macrophage amount, platelet-derived growth factor, vascular endothelial growth factor, and hypoxia-inducible factor as a biomarker. Rats were terminated after 7th and 14th days and were subjected to immunohistochemistry staining and examination.Entities:
Keywords: PDGF; VEGF; hypoxia inducible factor; macrophage
Year: 2021 PMID: 34429664 PMCID: PMC8374851 DOI: 10.2147/JEP.S296767
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Pharmacol ISSN: 1179-1454
Subject Grouping
| Abbreviation | Name | Intervention |
|---|---|---|
| DC | Diabetic control group | Diabetic ulcer wound mice model, treated with conventional therapy once a day (wound debridement with 0.9% normal saline, topical 2% fusidic acid antibiotic for infection management, and sterile gauze dressing) |
| NC | Non-diabetic control group | Non-diabetic control mice with excisional ulcer wound model with no therapy regiment given. |
| TS | Topical sucralfate monotherapy | Diabetic ulcer wound mice model, treated with topical sucralfate on the wound site once a day |
| TP | Topical PRP monotherapy | Diabetic ulcer wound mice model, treated with topical PRP once a week on the wound site on the 7th and 14th day |
| TSP | Topical sucralfate and PRP combination therapy | Diabetic ulcer wound mice model, treated with combination topical sucralfate and topical PRP. Topical platelet-rich plasma was given on the first day with a one-week interval and sucralfate application was given from the second day and was continuously given on every day (except on the 7th and 14th day when PRP was applied to the wounds). |
Figure 1Comparison of PDGF, VEGF, HIF-1 Alpha and Macrophage on 7th Day Study Period.
Figure 2Comparison of PDGF, VEGF, HIF-1 Alpha and Macrophage on 14th Day Study Period.
Figure 3Microscopic image of PDGF expression staining.(A) Diabetic control (DC) group. (B) Topical sucralfate (TS) group. (C) Topical platelet-rich plasma (TP) group. (D) Topical sucralfate and platelet-rich plasma combination (TSP) group.
Figure 4Microscopic image of VEGF expression staining. (A) Diabetic control (DC) group. (B) Topical sucralfate (TS) group. (C) Topical platelet-rich plasma (TP) group. (D) Topical sucralfate and platelet-rich plasma combination (TSP) group.
Figure 5Microscopic image of HIF-1 Alpha expression staining. (A) Diabetic control (DC) group. (B) Topical sucralfate (TS) group. (C) Topical platelet-rich plasma (TP) group. (D) Topical sucralfate and platelet-rich plasma combination (TSP) group.
Figure 6Microscopic image of macrophage staining. (A) Diabetic control (DC) group. (B) Topical sucralfate (TS) group. (C) Topical platelet-rich plasma (TP) group. (D) Topical sucralfate and platelet-rich plasma combination (TSP) group.