Fatty acid potassium improves human dermal fibroblast viability and cytotoxicity, accelerating human epidermal keratinocyte wound healing in vitro and in human chronic wounds

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: Fatty acid potassium improves human dermal fibroblast viability and cytotoxicity, accelerating human epidermal keratinocyte wound healing in vitro and in human chronic wounds
المؤلفون: Akihiro Masunaga, Takayoshi Kawahara, Sadanori Akita, Kohji Nakazawa, Yuto Tokunaga, Hayato Morita
المصدر: International Wound Journal
بيانات النشر: Blackwell Publishing Ltd, 2021.
سنة النشر: 2021
مصطلحات موضوعية: Keratinocytes, Linoleic acid, Potassium, chemistry.chemical_element, Dermatology, laser speckle flowgraph, 030207 dermatology & venereal diseases, 03 medical and health sciences, chemistry.chemical_compound, Wound care, 0302 clinical medicine, scratch assay, Medicine, Humans, 030212 general & internal medicine, chemistry.chemical_classification, Wound Healing, integumentary system, business.industry, human chronic wounds, Caprylic acid, Fatty Acids, Fatty acid, wound cleaning, Original Articles, Fibroblasts, Lauric acid, Oleic acid, chemistry, Biochemistry, Surgery, Original Article, fatty acid potassium, business, Wound healing
الوصف: Effective cleaning of a wound promotes wound healing and favours wound care as it can prevent and control biofilms. The presence of biofilm is associated with prolonged wound healing, increased wound propensity to infection, and delayed wound closure. Anionic potassium salts of fatty acids are tested with commonly used anionic surfactants, such as sodium laureth sulphate (SLES) and sodium lauryl sulphate/sodium dodecyl sulphate (SLS/SDS). The normal human dermal cells demonstrated significantly greater viability in fatty acid potassium, including caprylic acid (C8), capric acid (C10), lauric acid (C12), oleic acid (C18:1), and linoleic acid (C18:2), than in SLES or SLS after a 24‐hour incubation. Cytotoxicity by LDH assay in a 5‐minute culture in fatty acid potassium was significantly lower than in SLES or SLS. in vitro wound healing of human epidermal keratinocytes during the scratch assay in 24‐hour culture was more significantly improved by fatty acid treatment than by SLES or SLS/SDS. In a live/dead assay of human epidermal keratinocytes, C8K and C18:1K demonstrated only green fluorescence, indicating live cells, whereas synthetic surfactants, SLES and SLS, demonstrated red fluorescence on staining with propidium iodide, indicating dead cells after SLES and SLS/SDS treatment. Potassium salts of fatty acids are useful wound cleaning detergents that do not interfere with wound healing, as observed in the scratch assay using human epidermal keratinocytes. As potassium salts of fatty acids are major components of natural soap, which are produced by natural oil and caustic potash using a saponification method, this may be clinically important in wound and peri‐wound skin cleaning. In human chronic wounds, natural soap containing fatty acid potassium increased tissue blood flow based on laser speckle flowgraphs after 2 weeks (P
اللغة: English
تدمد: 1742-481X
1742-4801
URL الوصول: https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::47c6767c60ada4a46972824cd23eaca7
http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC8273623
حقوق: OPEN
رقم الأكسشن: edsair.doi.dedup.....47c6767c60ada4a46972824cd23eaca7
قاعدة البيانات: OpenAIRE