疤痕
机械转化
医学
伤口愈合
瘢痕疙瘩
焦点粘着
增生性瘢痕
纤维化
外科
病理
信号转导
细胞生物学
生物
作者
Leandra A. Barnes,Clement D. Marshall,Tripp Leavitt,Michael S. Hu,Alessandra L. Moore,Jennifer G. Gonzalez,Michael T. Longaker,Geoffrey C. Gurtner
出处
期刊:Advances in wound care
[Mary Ann Liebert]
日期:2018-02-01
卷期号:7 (2): 47-56
被引量:154
标识
DOI:10.1089/wound.2016.0709
摘要
Significance: Excessive scarring is major clinical and financial burden in the United States. Improved therapies are necessary to reduce scarring, especially in patients affected by hypertrophic and keloid scars. Recent Advances: Advances in our understanding of mechanical forces in the wound environment enable us to target mechanical forces to minimize scar formation. Fetal wounds experience much lower resting stress when compared with adult wounds, and they heal without scars. Therapies that modulate mechanical forces in the wound environment are able to reduce scar size. Critical Issues: Increased mechanical stresses in the wound environment induce hypertrophic scarring via activation of mechanotransduction pathways. Mechanical stimulation modulates integrin, Wingless-type, protein kinase B, and focal adhesion kinase, resulting in cell proliferation and, ultimately, fibrosis. Therefore, the development of therapies that reduce mechanical forces in the wound environment would decrease the risk of developing excessive scars. Future Directions: The development of novel mechanotherapies is necessary to minimize scar formation and advance adult wound healing toward the scarless ideal. Mechanotransduction pathways are potential targets to reduce excessive scar formation, and thus, continued studies on therapies that utilize mechanical offloading and mechanomodulation are needed.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI