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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Skin Acute Wound Healing: A Comprehensive Review

TLDR
This review provides present day information regarding the status of the participant cells, extracellular matrix, cytokines, chemokines, and growth factors, as well as their interactions with the microenvironment during the wound healing process.
Abstract
Experimental work of the last two decades has revealed the general steps of the wound healing process. This complex network has been organized in three sequential and overlapping steps. The first step of the inflammatory phase is an immediate response to injury; primary sensory neurons sense injury and send danger signals to the brain, to stop bleeding and start inflammation. The following target of the inflammatory phase, led by the peripheral blood mononuclear cells, is to eliminate the pathogens and clean the wound. Once this is completed, the inflammatory phase is resolved and homeostasis is restored. The aim of the proliferative phase, the second phase, is to repair wound damage and begin tissue remodeling. Fibroplasia, reepithelialization, angiogenesis, and peripheral nerve repair are the central actions of this phase. Lastly, the objective of the final phase is to complete tissue remodeling and restore skin integrity. This review provides present day information regarding the status of the participant cells, extracellular matrix, cytokines, chemokines, and growth factors, as well as their interactions with the microenvironment during the wound healing process.

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Journal ArticleDOI

A Review of Micronutrients and the Immune System–Working in Harmony to Reduce the Risk of Infection

TL;DR: Although contradictory data exist, available evidence indicates that supplementation with multiple micronutrients with immune-supporting roles may modulate immune function and reduce the risk of infection.
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Immunology of Acute and Chronic Wound Healing

TL;DR: In this paper, the role of innate and adaptive immunity in the pathogenesis of acute and chronic wound is discussed and the latest immunomodulatory therapeutic strategies, including modifying macrophage phenotype, regulating miRNA expression and targeting pro-and anti-inflammatory factors to improve wound healing.
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Current Approaches Targeting the Wound Healing Phases to Attenuate Fibrosis and Scarring

TL;DR: The most recent literature elucidating molecular pathways that can be targeted to reduce fibrosis with a particular focus on post-burn scarring is reviewed.
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The Role of MSC in Wound Healing, Scarring and Regeneration

Raquel Guillamat-Prats
- 08 Jul 2021 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of mesenchymal stem/stromal cells (MSCs) and their derived products in each step of the wound repair process are described, and the pre-clinical and clinical use of MSCs to benefit in skin wound healing in diabetic associated wounds and in pathophysiological fibrosis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Understanding the impact of fibroblast heterogeneity on skin fibrosis

TL;DR: The multifaceted aspects of fibroblast heterogeneity and the different roles of Fibroblast subpopulations to help overcome skin scarring and fibrosis are discussed.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Neutrophil extracellular traps kill bacteria

TL;DR: It is described that, upon activation, neutrophils release granule proteins and chromatin that together form extracellular fibers that bind Gram-positive and -negative bacteria, which degrade virulence factors and kill bacteria.
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Exploring the full spectrum of macrophage activation.

TL;DR: This Review suggests a new grouping of macrophages based on three different homeostatic activities — host defence, wound healing and immune regulation, and proposes that similarly to primary colours, these three basic macrophage populations can blend into various other 'shades' of activation.
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Pattern Recognition Receptors and Inflammation

TL;DR: The role of PRRs, their signaling pathways, and how they control inflammatory responses are discussed.
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Monocyte and macrophage heterogeneity

TL;DR: Recent studies have shown that monocyte heterogeneity is conserved in humans and mice, allowing dissection of its functional relevance: the different monocyte subsets seem to reflect developmental stages with distinct physiological roles, such as recruitment to inflammatory lesions or entry to normal tissues.
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The pathobiology of diabetic complications: a unifying mechanism.

TL;DR: What was learned about the pathobiology of diabetic complications starting with that 1966 Science paper and continuing through the end of the 1990s are described, including a unified mechanism that links together all of the seemingly unconnected pieces of the puzzle.
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