Journal
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF LOWER EXTREMITY WOUNDS
Volume 21, Issue 3, Pages 264-271Publisher
SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/15347346211037841
Keywords
chronic wound; wound healing; aging; elderly; old age
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Population aging, while an accomplishment, poses a significant challenge due to age-related skin changes and impaired wound healing in the elderly, leading to nonhealing chronic wounds. Multidisciplinary wound care strategies are necessary to address this issue, with a focus on developing diagnostic and therapeutic strategies to improve healing and understanding the complex biology of cellular senescence.
While population aging is an accomplishment that deserves acclamation, it is in itself a tremendous challenge. Age-related skin changes, impaired wound healing, and concurrent comorbidities are the deadly triad that contribute most to the development of nonhealing chronic wounds in the elderly. This imposes enormous medical, social, and financial burden. With the rising trend in the aging population, this problem is likely to exacerbate unless multidisciplinary, rapt wound care strategies are developed. The last decade was dedicated to understand the basic biology underlying the wound healing process but most in vitro and animal model studies translated poorly to human conditions. Forthcoming, the focus is on the development of diagnostic and therapeutic strategies to improve healing in this vulnerable age group. Further, understanding the complex pathobiology of cellular senescence and wound healing process is required to develop focused therapy for these problem wounds in the elderly.
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