| Literature DB >> 35684503 |
Stefania Vitale1, Sara Colanero2, Martina Placidi1, Giovanna Di Emidio1, Carla Tatone1, Fernanda Amicarelli1, Anna Maria D'Alessandro1.
Abstract
Wound healing is a complicated process, and the effective management of wounds is a major challenge. Natural herbal remedies have now become fundamental for the management of skin disorders and the treatment of skin infections due to the side effects of modern medicine and lower price for herbal products. The aim of the present study is to summarize the most recent in vitro, in vivo, and clinical studies on major herbal preparations, their phytochemical constituents, and new formulations for wound management. Research reveals that several herbal medicaments have marked activity in the management of wounds and that this activity is ascribed to flavonoids, alkaloids, saponins, and phenolic compounds. These phytochemicals can act at different stages of the process by means of various mechanisms, including anti-inflammatory, antimicrobial, antioxidant, collagen synthesis stimulating, cell proliferation, and angiogenic effects. The application of natural compounds using nanotechnology systems may provide significant improvement in the efficacy of wound treatments. Increasing the clinical use of these therapies would require safety assessment in clinical trials.Entities:
Keywords: herbs; medicinal plants; natural wound dressing; secondary metabolites; skin disorders; wound healing
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35684503 PMCID: PMC9182061 DOI: 10.3390/molecules27113566
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.927
Figure 1Wound-healing process. The wound healing process is commonly categorized into four distinct phases: (A) Homeostasis (coagulation); (B) inflammatory phase (early/ late inflammation); (C) proliferative phase (proliferation/migration/epithelialization/granulation); (D) remodeling phase (maturation/repair). (A) Hemostasis: A clot is formed, providing a temporary barrier to fluid loss and pathogen entry; acts as a reservoir of bioactive factors and antimicrobials; provides provisional extracellular matrix, which supports immune cell infiltration and migration; and initiates tissue repair pathways. (B) Inflammatory phase: Early step with damage-associated molecular patterns activation, free radicals, and reactive molecular species production to recruit immune cells; release of antimicrobial species; infiltrating immune cells that secrete amplifying alarmin signals (endogenous, constitutively expressed, chemotactic, and immune-activating proteins/peptides that are released as a result of degranulation, cell injury or death, or in response to immune induction), and activation of keratinocytes and fibroblasts. (C) Proliferation phase: Migration and proliferation of keratinocytes, fibroblasts, endothelial; resolution of inflammation; collagen/extracellular matrix synthesis; decreased vessel permeability; new capillary and lymphatic vessel angiogenesis; epithelialization; and de novo formation of granulation tissue. (D) Remodeling (maturation): Collagen/extracellular matrix turnover (synthesis and degradation); extracellular matrix reorganization and realignment; extracellular matrix contraction; endothelia and fibroblast apoptosis; repigmentation.
Figure 2Processes active in acute and chronic wounds. Acute wounds (left side): Adequate angiogenesis with re-epithelialization promotion, fibroblasts’ proliferation, and neutrophils’ anti-infection activities. Chronic wounds (right side): Persistent local bacterial infections, failure formation of novel blood vessels. decreased fibroblasts’ proliferation, and the neutrophils’ anti-infection activities hampered by poor angiogenesis.
Figure 3The primary bioactive phytochemical structures involved in wound healing.
Medical plants and their effects in wound healing.
| Plant | Parts Used | Main Bioactive Components | In Vivo Wound Model, Doses and Routes of Administration | In Vitro Model and Doses | Biological Activity | Mechanism of Action | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| flower aerial parts | FLAVONOIDS | Full-thickness incisional wound in Sprague-Dawley rats―topical: 3% acqueous extract (AAE). | Hs68, HaCaT, and RAW 264.7 cell line: | Antibacterial | Modulates the inflammatory cytokine and growth factor; activates Akt signaling pathways; stimulates collagen expression; stimulates keratinocyte differentiation and motility; reduces inflammatory mediators NO and PGE2. | [ |
|
| fleshy leaves | FLAVONOIDS | Full-thickness wound in Wistar rats― | Fibroblast: | Antibacterial | Modulates the inflammatory response; modulates signaling proteins phosphorylation; Stimulates collagen deposition and angiogenesis; Strongly promotes fibroblast proliferation and moderately stimulates keratinocyte migration. | [ |
|
| root (tuber) | FLAVONOIDS | Partial-thickness burn wound model in mice | human mesangial cells (HMCs): 5, 10, and 20 μg/mL. | Antimicrobial and antiviral | Promotes expression of mediators of the inflammatory response (TNF-α, IL-1β, and IFN-γ); increases NO and promotes neutrophils, monocytes, and macrophages chemotaxis; promotes epithelial cells growth and fibroblast proliferation. | [ |
|
| flowers | TRITERPENOIDS | Full-thickness excisional wound in BALB/c―topical: 150 mg/kg BW ethanolic or water extract ointment. | Human dermal fibroblasts: | Anti- Inflammatory | Promotes expression of mediators of the inflammatory response; increases keratinocytes and fibroblasts proliferation; stimulates collagen production and angiogenesis; inhibits lipoxygenase activity; reduced glutathione levels. | [ |
|
| leaves | TRITERPENOIDS | Full-thickness lesions― | Anti-inflammatory | Reduces early and late edema; reduces myeloperoxidase activity. | [ | |
|
| stigmi, stamen, flowers | CAROTENOIDS | Second degree burn in Wistar rats―topical: cream with 20% pollen saffron. | Fibroblasts from newborn mice: hydrogel with 160 mg/L crocin from saffron. | Antioxidant | Reduces the level of pro-inflammatory cytokines (TNF-α and IL-6) | [ |
|
| rhizomes | CURCUMINOIDS (bisdemethoxycurcumin, | Full-thickness wound in Balb/c mice―topical: gel 3% curcumin | Rat BMSCs bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells: | Antioxidant | Regulates many genes implicated in the initiation of inflammatory responses (NF-(κ)B, AKT, PI3K, IKK); enhances fibroblast migration, granulation tissue formation, collagen deposition; increases TGF-β production; increases fibroblast proliferation. | [ |
|
| root, leaves | FLAVONOIDS | Sprague Dawley rats wound―topical: 3% extract in crem. | 3T3 Cell Line: 1–25 μg/mL extract | Antimicrobial | Increases collagen deposition; increases the wound healing rate; reduces superoxide anion; inhibits NO production; increases fibroblast proliferation. | [ |
|
| flowers, leaves, root, whole plant | POLYSACCHARIDES | BALB/c mice cut wound– | Mesenchimal Stem cells: | Antibacterial | Modulates the inflammatory response; Increases collagen deposition; Enhances vascularization; increases the wound healing rate. | [ |
| leaves | MONOTERPENOIDS | Oral epithelial cell line H400: 0.1 mg/mL extract | Antibacterial | Inhibits NO production; reduces superoxide anion; reduces pro-inflammatory cytochine level (PGE2, TNF-α); decreases fibroblasts H2O2 cytotoxicity | [ | ||
|
| aerial parts | TERPENES | BALB/c mice excisional splinting model―topical: 0.5% | Human dermal fibroblasts and epidermal keratinocytes: 0.031% extract | Anti-inflammatory | Reduces pro-inflammatory cytokines; | [ |
|
| leaves, flowers roots, stems | FLAVONOIDS | full-thickness excision cutaneous wounds in alloxan-induced-diabetic BALB/c mice―topical: 100% essential oil - intraperitoneal injection: 0.2 mL, 10% ( | RAW 264.7 murine macrophage cells: 5–10 μg/mL hydroalcoholic extract | Antimicrobial | Inhibits NO production; reduces inflammatory cytokines expression (IL-1β, IL-6, TNF-α); reduces expression of iNOS, COX-2, P-IκB and NF-κB/p65. | [ |
Akt: Protein Kinase B; NO: Nitric Oxide; TNF-α: Tumor necrosis factor alpha; IL: Interleukin; IFN-γ: Interferon gamma; NF-(κ)B: Nuclear Factor Kappa B; PI3K: Phosphoinositide 3-kinase; IKK: IkappaB Kinase; TGF-β: Transforming Growth Factor beta; PGE2: Prostaglandin E; H2O2: Hydrogen peroxide; iNOS: Inducible Nitric Oxide Synthase; COX-2: Cyclooxygenase-2; P-IκB: Phosphorylated Inhibitor kappaB.