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Nerve growth factor accelerates wound healing in diabetic mice
Author(s) -
Muangman Pornprom,
Muffley Lara A.,
Anthony Joanne P.,
Spenny Michelle L.,
Underwood Robert A.,
Olerud John E.,
Gibran Nicole S.
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
wound repair and regeneration
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.847
H-Index - 109
eISSN - 1524-475X
pISSN - 1067-1927
DOI - 10.1111/j.1067-1927.2004.012110.x-1
Subject(s) - nerve growth factor , wound healing , medicine , saline , inflammation , endocrinology , surgery , receptor
Patients with diabetic neuropathy have reduced numbers of cutaneous nerves, which may contribute to an increased incidence of nonhealing wounds. Nerve growth factor (NGF) has been reported to augment wound closure. We hypothesized that topical 2.5S NGF, a biologically active subunit of the NGF polymer, would accelerate wound repair, augment nerve regeneration, and increase inflammation in excisional wounds in diabetic mice. A full‐thickness 6‐mm punch biopsy wound was created on the dorsum of C57BL/6 J‐m + Leprdb mice (db/db) and heterozygous (db/–) littermates and treated daily with normal saline or 2.5S NGF (1 µg/day or 10 µg/day) on post‐injury days 0–6. Time to closure, wound epithelialization, and degree of inflammation were compared using a Student's t ‐test. Color subtractive‐computer‐assisted image analysis was used to quantify immunolocalized nerves in wounds. Non‐overlapping (20×) digital images of the wound were analyzed for nerve profile counts, area density (number of protein gene product 9.5 positive profiles per unit dermal area) and area fraction (protein gene product 9.5 positive area per unit dermal area). Healing times in db/db mice decreased from 30 days in normal saline‐treated mice to 26 days in mice treated with 1 µg/day NGF ( p  < 0.05) and 24 days in mice treated with 10 µg/day NGF ( p  < 0.02). A similar trend in db/– mice was not significant. NGF treatment augmented epithelialization in the db/db mice ( p  < 0.05). Histological evaluation of inflammation in healed wounds showed no statistical difference between treatment groups. Total nerve number, area density, and area fraction were increased in NGF‐treated wounds at 14, 21, and 35 days ( p  < 0.05). The 2.5 NGF subunit may improve wound closure kinetics by promoting epithelialization and nerve regeneration. Further studies to determine the role of nerves in wound repair are warranted.

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