Abstract
There is a close association of chronic tissue damage, inflammation and cancer. A chronic injury may contribute to sustained healing response leading to fibrosis, organ failure and carcinogenesis. Wounds created due to mechanical or patho-physiological insults, generally follow a sophisticated series of mutually coherent steps leading to the re-establishment of the affected tissue or organ. The process of wound healing resembles fundamental processes like embryogenesis and tissue regeneration. All the stages in the wound healing process are tightly regulated and any sort of imbalance may lead to either non healing chronic ulcers or excessively healed hypertrophic scars. Diabetic wounds are also very tough to heal and in many cases they do not heal, ultimately resulting in the amputation of that body part. The non-healing property of diabetic wounds may be due to combined effect of intrinsic and extrinsic factors. In this review, we aimed to explore the steps involved in diabetic wound healing and compare it with the process of carcinogenesis. This review demonstrates that both carcinogenesis and the diabetic wound healing follow a similar path of latent healing in an abnormal exaggerated manner.
Keywords: Diabetic wounds, carcinogenesis, inflammation, platelet aggregation, infection, microenvironment.
Current Diabetes Reviews
Title:Carcinogenesis and Diabetic Wound Healing: Evidences of Parallelism
Volume: 11 Issue: 1
Author(s): Kanhaiya Singh and Kiran Singh
Affiliation:
Keywords: Diabetic wounds, carcinogenesis, inflammation, platelet aggregation, infection, microenvironment.
Abstract: There is a close association of chronic tissue damage, inflammation and cancer. A chronic injury may contribute to sustained healing response leading to fibrosis, organ failure and carcinogenesis. Wounds created due to mechanical or patho-physiological insults, generally follow a sophisticated series of mutually coherent steps leading to the re-establishment of the affected tissue or organ. The process of wound healing resembles fundamental processes like embryogenesis and tissue regeneration. All the stages in the wound healing process are tightly regulated and any sort of imbalance may lead to either non healing chronic ulcers or excessively healed hypertrophic scars. Diabetic wounds are also very tough to heal and in many cases they do not heal, ultimately resulting in the amputation of that body part. The non-healing property of diabetic wounds may be due to combined effect of intrinsic and extrinsic factors. In this review, we aimed to explore the steps involved in diabetic wound healing and compare it with the process of carcinogenesis. This review demonstrates that both carcinogenesis and the diabetic wound healing follow a similar path of latent healing in an abnormal exaggerated manner.
Export Options
About this article
Cite this article as:
Singh Kanhaiya and Singh Kiran, Carcinogenesis and Diabetic Wound Healing: Evidences of Parallelism, Current Diabetes Reviews 2015; 11 (1) . https://dx.doi.org/10.2174/1573399811666150109122205
DOI https://dx.doi.org/10.2174/1573399811666150109122205 |
Print ISSN 1573-3998 |
Publisher Name Bentham Science Publisher |
Online ISSN 1875-6417 |
- Author Guidelines
- Graphical Abstracts
- Fabricating and Stating False Information
- Research Misconduct
- Post Publication Discussions and Corrections
- Publishing Ethics and Rectitude
- Increase Visibility of Your Article
- Archiving Policies
- Peer Review Workflow
- Order Your Article Before Print
- Promote Your Article
- Manuscript Transfer Facility
- Editorial Policies
- Allegations from Whistleblowers
- Announcements
Related Articles
-
Herpes Simplex Virus Type 1 Amplicons and their Hybrid Virus Partners, EBV, AAV, and Retrovirus
Current Gene Therapy Ceramidases in Hematological Malignancies: Senseless or Neglected Target?
Anti-Cancer Agents in Medicinal Chemistry Targeting Ras Activity Prevented Amyloid Beta-Induced Aberrant Neuronal Cell Cycle Re-Entry and Death
Current Alzheimer Research Nanotechnologies: A Strategy to Overcome Blood-Brain Barrier
Current Drug Metabolism Cationic Lipophilic Radiotracers for Functional Imaging of Multidrug Resistance
Current Radiopharmaceuticals Reversible and Irreversible Aggregation of Proteins from the FET Family: Influence of Repeats in Protein Chain on Its Aggregation Capacity
Current Protein & Peptide Science Plasminogen Activator Inhibitor-1 in Tumor Growth, Angiogenesis and Vascular Remodeling
Current Pharmaceutical Design Modular Nanotransporters for Targeted Intracellular Delivery of Drugs: Folate Receptors as Potential Targets
Current Pharmaceutical Design Quercetin in Cancer Treatment, Alone or in Combination with Conventional Therapeutics?
Current Medicinal Chemistry Functional Role of miR-34 Family in Human Cancer
Current Drug Targets Structure-Editing of Nucleic Acids for Selective Targeting of RNA
Current Topics in Medicinal Chemistry Mammalian Target of Rapamycin (mTOR) Inhibitors as Anti-Cancer Agents
Current Cancer Drug Targets Anti-cancer and Anti-angiogenic Properties of Various Natural Pentacyclic Tri-terpenoids and Some of their Chemical Derivatives
Current Organic Chemistry The Pathology Induced by Highly Active Antiretroviral Therapy Against Human Immunodeficiency Virus: an Update
Current Medicinal Chemistry Functionalized Upconversion Nanoparticles: Versatile Nanoplatforms for Translational Research
Current Molecular Medicine Therapeutic Potential of Peptide Motifs Against HIV-1 Reverse Transcriptase and Integrase
Current Pharmaceutical Design Targeted Drugs and Nanomedicine: Present and Future
Current Pharmaceutical Design Preferentially Expressed Antigen in Melanoma (PRAME) and the PRAME Family of Leucine-Rich Repeat Proteins
Current Cancer Drug Targets A Link Between Chemical Structure and Biological Activity in Triterpenoids
Recent Patents on Anti-Cancer Drug Discovery Autophagy: Molecular Mechanisms and their Implications for Anticancer Therapies
Current Cancer Drug Targets