Abstract
Introduction: Current study was designed to evaluate the wound healing activity of a Saudi pomegranate peel extract on excision wound healing in experimentally induced diabetes in rats. Methodology: Animals were divided into three groups: diabetic excision wound with no treatment, diabetic excision wound with gel alone and diabetic excision wound with Saudi pomegranate peel extract in gel. Animals were monitored for clinical signs, weekly body weight, morbidity and mortality during entire study period. The efficacy parameters evaluated were percent wound contraction, Hydroxyproline content, estimation of Transforming Growth Factor ß1 (TGF-ß1), Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor (VEGF), and Epidermal Growth Factor (EGF) in wound lysates by ELISA, mRNA expression of TGF-ß1, VEGF, and EGF in wound lysates by qPCR, Estimation of nitric oxide (NO) and NO synthase (NOS) in Wound Lysates and histopathology of skin for reepithelization, neovascularization, and inflammation. Results: The Saudi pomegranate peel extract in gel (5.0 g extract per 100 g gel) showed significant wound healing activity when compared to the vehicle control [p < 0.05] following 21 days of treatment. Animals in the control and treatment groups were apparently normal through the study with no significant differences in body weights between groups. Expression of mRNA of TGFβ1, EGF and VEGF in wounds was the highest on day 14 post treatment 4.3, 3.5 and 0.9 fold higher respectively in the treatment group when compared to vehicle control, and on day 21, the values were 0.12, 0.3 and 0.83, respectively. No statistically significant differences were observed in TGF-ß1 levels in wounds on days 4, 7, 14 and 21 post treatment when compared to the vehicle control (p > 0.05). Significantly higher levels of VEGF were observed in treatment group on day 7 and 21 when compared to vehicle control (p < 0.05). Significantly higher levels of EGF were observed in treatment group on day 7 and 21 when compared to vehicle control (p < 0.05). Mean hydroxyproline levels were higher in treatment group on days 4 and 7 when compared to vehicle control. NO levels in treatment group were significantly lower on days 7, 14 and 21 when compared to vehicle control (p < 0.05). NOS activity in treatment group were significantly lower on days 4 and 7 when compared to vehicle control (p < 0.05). Histopathological changes in skin wound in the treatment group were consistent with wound healing when compared to the vehicle group. Conclusion: This study’s findings suggest that topical application of SPPE gel effectively enhanced wound healing in experimentally induced diabetic conditions.
Highlights
Current study was designed to evaluate the wound healing activity of a Saudi pomegranate peel extract on excision wound healing in experimentally induced diabetes in rats
Diabetes mellitus is increasing at an unprecedented pace in Saudi Arabia, patients with type-2 diabetes (T2D) are often affected by delayed healing that develops into chronic wounds, diabetic foot ulcers, and may result in complications, including gangrene and limb amputation
This study aims to investigate the effect of Saudi pomegranate peel extract (SPPE) on healing when used in experimentally induced, full thickness skin wounds in diabetic rats in terms of clinical, biochemical (Hydroxyproline, TGFß1, VEGF, EGF, Nitric Oxide (NO) and NO Synthase (NOS)) and histopathological aspects
Summary
Current study was designed to evaluate the wound healing activity of a Saudi pomegranate peel extract on excision wound healing in experimentally induced diabetes in rats. Diabetes mellitus is increasing at an unprecedented pace in Saudi Arabia, patients with type-2 diabetes (T2D) are often affected by delayed healing that develops into chronic wounds, diabetic foot ulcers, and may result in complications, including gangrene and limb amputation These wound healing complications have an effect on both the quality of treatment and the cost of healthcare (Alshammary et al, 2020). Re-epithelisation are a major cause of impaired wound healing in diabetics with low levels of the growth factors like EGF, VEGF and TGF- ß1 (Costa and Soares, 2013) These biomarkers were chosen for this experimental study to assess drug mechanism during wound healing
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