4.5 Article

Expression of neuropeptides and cytokines in a rabbit model of diabetic neuroischemic wound healing

Journal

JOURNAL OF VASCULAR SURGERY
Volume 58, Issue 3, Pages 766-+

Publisher

MOSBY-ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jvs.2012.11.095

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [R01 1R01NS066205-01]
  2. William J. von Liebig Foundation

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Objective: The present study is designed to understand the contribution of peripheral vascular disease and peripheral neuropathy to the wound-healing impairment associated with diabetes. Using a rabbit model of diabetic neuroischemic wound healing, we investigated rate of healing, leukocyte infiltration, and expression of cytokines, interleukin-8 and interleukin-6, and neuropeptides, substance P, and neuropeptide Y. Methods: Diabetes was induced in New Zealand White rabbits by administering alloxan while control rabbits received saline. Ten days later, animals in both groups underwent surgery. One ear served as a sham, and the other was made ischemic (ligation of central + rostral arteries) or neuroischemic (ischemia + resection of central + rostral nerves). Four 6-mm punch biopsy wounds were created in both ears and wound healing was followed for 10 days using computerized planimetry. Results: Nondiabetic sham and ischemic wounds healed significantly more rapidly than diabetic sham and ischemic wounds. Healing was slowest in neuroischemic wounds, irrespective of diabetic status. A high M1/M2 macrophage ratio and a high proinflammatory cytokine expression, both indicators of chronic proinflammatory state, and low neuropeptide expression were seen in preinjury diabetic skin. Postinjury, in diabetic wounds, the M1/M2 ratio remained high, the reactive increase in cytokine expression was low, and neuropeptide expression was further decreased in neuroischemic wounds. Conclusions: This rabbit model illustrates how a combination of a high M1/M2 ratio, a failure to mount postinjury cytokine response as well as a diminished neuropeptide expression, contribute to wound-healing impairment in diabetes. The addition of neuropathy to ischemia leads to equivalently severe impaired wound-healing irrespective of diabetes status, suggesting that in the presence of ischemia, loss of neuropeptide function contributes to the impaired healing associated with diabetes.

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