Glucose toxic effects on granulation tissue productive cells: the diabetics' impaired healing.

["Berlanga-Acosta J", "Schultz G", "L\u00f3pez-Mola E", "Guillen-Nieto G", "Garc\u00eda-Siverio M", "Herrera-Mart\u00ednez L"]
BioMed research international 2013
Open on PubMed

Type 2 diabetes mellitus is a metabolic noncommunicable disease with an expanding pandemic magnitude. Diabetes predisposes to lower extremities ulceration and impairs the healing process leading to wound chronification. Diabetes also dismantles innate immunity favoring wound infection. Amputation is therefore acknowledged as one of the disease's complications. Hyperglycemia is the proximal detonator of systemic and local toxic effectors including proinflammation, acute-phase proteins elevation, and spillover of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species. Insulin axis deficiency weakens wounds' anabolism and predisposes to inflammation. The systemic accumulation of advanced glycation end-products irreversibly impairs the entire physiology from cells-to-organs. These factors in concert hamper fibroblasts and endothelial cells proliferation, migration, homing, secretion, and organization of a productive granulation tissue. Diabetic wound bed may turn chronically inflammed, procatabolic, and an additional source of circulating pro-inflammatory cytokines, establishing a self-perpetuating loop. Diabetic fibroblasts and endothelial cells may bear mitochondrial damages becoming prone to apoptosis, which impairs granulation tissue cellularity and perfusion. Endothelial progenitor cells recruitment and tubulogenesis are also impaired. Failure of wound reepithelialization remains a clinical challenge while it appears to be biologically multifactorial. Ulcer prevention by primary care surveillance, education, and attention programs is of outmost importance to reduce worldwide amputation figures.

5 Figures Extracted
Figure 1
Figure 1 PMC
Negative impact of high glucose levels on cutaneous fibroblasts biology. Short- or long-term exposure to high glucose concentrations is toxic for cuta...
Figure 2
Figure 2 PMC
Negative impact of high glucose levels and failure of the insulin system on vascular cells. Endothelial cells are a sensitive target for high glucose ...
Figure 3
Figure 3 PMC
Common histological aspect of a neuropathic granulation tissue. Neuropathic granulation tissue exhibiting a scarce deposition of extracellular matrix....
Figure 4
Figure 4 PMC
Common histological aspects of ischemic granulation tissue. Note the presence of an intense inflammatory infiltrate of round cells spread all over the...
Figure 5
Figure 5 PMC
Impact of hyperglycemia on granulation tissue biology. The onset of a systemic pro-inflammatory program due to sustained hyperglycemia is associated w...