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Review Wound Healing Nutritional Support for Wound Healing Douglas MacKay, ND, and Alan L. Miller, ND Abstract Introduction Healing of wounds, whether from accidental Wound healing involves a complex series injury or surgical intervention, involves the of interactions between different cell types, activity of an intricate network of blood cells, cytokine mediators, and the extracellular matrix. tissue types, cytokines, and growth factors. The phases of normal wound healing include he- This results in increased cellular activity, which mostasis, inflammation, proliferation, and remod- causes an intensified metabolic demand for eling. Each phase of wound healing is distinct, nutrients. Nutritional deficiencies can impede although the wound healing process is continu- wound healing, and several nutritional factors ous, with each phase overlapping the next. Be- required for wound repair may improve healing cause successful wound healing requires adequate time and wound outcome. Vitamin A is required blood and nutrients to be supplied to the site of for epithelial and bone formation, cellular damage, the overall health and nutritional status differentiation, and immune function. Vitamin of the patient influences the outcome of the dam- C is necessary for collagen formation, proper aged tissue. Some wound care experts advocate a immune function, and as a tissue antioxidant. holistic approach for wound patients that consid- Vitamin E is the major lipid-soluble antioxidant ers coexisting physical and psychological factors, in the skin; however, the effect of vitamin E on including nutritional status and disease states such surgical wounds is inconclusive. Bromelain 1 reduces edema, bruising, pain, and healing as diabetes, cancer, and arthritis. Keast and Orsted time following trauma and surgical procedures. wittily state, “Best practice requires the assess- Glucosamine appears to be the rate-limiting ment of the whole patient, not just the hole in the substrate for hyaluronic acid production in the patient. All possible contributing factors must be wound. Adequate dietary protein is absolutely explored.” essential for proper wound healing, and tissue Wound repair must occur in a physiologic levels of the amino acids arginine and environment conducive to tissue repair and regen- glutamine may influence wound repair and eration. However, several clinically significant immune function. The botanical medicines factors are known to impede wound healing, in- Centella asiatica and Aloe vera have been used cluding hypoxia, infection, tumors, metabolic dis- for decades, both topically and internally, to orders such as diabetes mellitus, the presence of enhance wound repair, and scientific studies debris and necrotic tissue, certain medications, and are now beginning to validate efficacy and explore mechanisms of action for these Douglas J. MacKay, ND – Technical Advisor, Thorne botanicals. To promote wound healing in the Research, Inc; Senior Editor, Alternative Medicine Review; shortest time possible, with minimal pain, private practice, Sandpoint, ID. Correspondence address: Thorne Research, PO Box 25, discomfort, and scarring to the patient, it is Dover, ID 83825 E-mail: duffy@thorne.com important to explore nutritional and botanical Alan L. Miller, ND – Technical Advisor, Thorne Research, influences on wound outcome. Inc; Senior Editor, Alternative Medicine Review. (Altern Med Rev 2003;8(4):359-377) Correspondence address: Thorne Research, PO Box 25, Dover, ID 83825 E-mail: alanm@thorne.com Alternative Medicine Review ◆ Volume 8, Number 4 ◆ 2003 Page 359 Wound Healing Review a diet deficient in protein, vitamins, or minerals. tissue. The neutrophils engulf debris and In addition, increased metabolic demands are microorganisms, providing the first line of defense made by the inflammation and cellular activity in against infection. Neutrophil migration ceases the healing wound, which may require increased after the first few days post-injury if the wound is protein or amino acids, vitamins, and minerals.2 not contaminated. If this acute inflammatory phase The objective in wound management is persists, due to wound hypoxia, infection, to heal the wound in the shortest time possible, nutritional deficiencies, medication use, or other with minimal pain, discomfort, and scarring to the factors related to the patient’s immune response, 3 patient. At the site of wound closure a flexible and it can interfere with the late inflammatory phase. fine scar with high tensile strength is desired. In the late inflammatory phase, monocytes Understanding the healing process and nutritional converted in the tissue to macrophages, which di- influences on wound outcome is critical to suc- gest and kill bacterial pathogens, scavenge tissue cessful management of wound patients. Research- debris and destroy remaining neutrophils. Mac- ers who have explored the complex dynamics of rophages begin the transition from wound inflam- tissue repair have identified several nutritional mation to wound repair by secreting a variety of cofactors involved in tissue regeneration, includ- chemotactic and growth factors that stimulate cell ing vitamins A, C, and E, zinc, arginine, glutamine, migration, proliferation, and formation of the tis- and glucosamine. Botanical extracts from Aloe sue matrix. vera, Centella asiatica, and the enzyme brome- The subsequent proliferative phase is lain from pineapple have also been shown to im- dominated by the formation of granulation tissue prove healing time and wound outcome. Eclectic and epithelialization. Its duration is dependent on therapies, including topical application of honey, the size of the wound. Chemotactic and growth sugar, sugar paste, or Calendula succus to open factors released from platelets and macrophages wounds, and comfrey poultices and hydrotherapy stimulate the migration and activation of wound to closed wounds are still in use today. Although fibroblasts that produce a variety of substances anecdotal reports support the efficacy of these essential to wound repair, including glycosami- eclectic therapies, scientific evidence is lacking. noglycans (mainly hyaluronic acid, chondroitin- 4-sulfate, dermatan sulfate, and heparan sulfate) 2 The Four Phases of Wound Healing and collagen. These form an amorphous, gel-like Tissue injury initiates a response that first connective tissue matrix necessary for cell migra- clears the wound of devitalized tissue and foreign tion. material, setting the stage for subsequent tissue New capillary growth must accompany healing and regeneration. The initial vascular re- the advancing fibroblasts into the wound to pro- sponse involves a brief and transient period of vide metabolic needs. Collagen synthesis and vasoconstriction and hemostasis. A 5-10 minute cross-linkage is responsible for vascular integrity period of intense vasoconstriction is followed by and strength of new capillary beds. Improper active vasodilation accompanied by an increase cross-linkage of collagen fibers has been respon- in capillary permeability. Platelets aggregated sible for nonspecific post-operative bleeding in within a fibrin clot secrete a variety of growth fac- patients with normal coagulation parameters.4 tors and cytokines that set the stage for an orderly Early in the proliferation phase fibroblast activity series of events leading to tissue repair. is limited to cellular replication and migration. The second phase of wound healing, the Around the third day after wounding the growing inflammatory phase, presents itself as erythema, mass of fibroblast cells begin to synthesize and swelling, and warmth, and is often associated with secrete measurable amounts of collagen. Collagen pain. The inflammatory response increases levels rise continually for approximately three vascular permeability, resulting in migration of weeks. The amount of collagen secreted during neutrophils and monocytes into the surrounding this period determines the tensile strength of the wound. Page 360 Alternative Medicine Review ◆ Volume 8, Number 4 ◆ 2003 Review Wound Healing Figure 1. Nutrient Impacts on the Phases of Wound Healing Wounding Calendula succus – topical antimicrobial Hemostasis Drugs, herbs, vitamins, amino acids, or minerals that effect blood-clotting mechanisms should be avoided prior to surgery. Inflammatory Phase Vitamin A – enhances early inflammatory phase Bromelain and adequate protein intake – prevent prolonging inflammatory phase Vitamin C – enhances neutrophil migration and lymphocyte transformation Proliferative Phase Vitamin C – necessary for collagen synthesis Centella asiatica – promotes type-1 collagen synthesis Glucosamine – enhances hyaluronic acid production Vitamin A – promotes epithelial cell differentiation Zinc – required for DNA synthesis, cell division, and protein synthesis Calendula succus and Aloe vera – support formation of granulation tissue Remodeling Protein deficiency – inhibits wound remodeling The final phase of wound healing is Figure 1 summarizes the phases of wound wound remodeling, including a reorganization of healing and nutrients that impact the various new collagen fibers, forming a more organized lat- phases. tice structure that progressively continues to in- crease wound tensile strength. The remodeling process continues up to two years, achieving 40- 70 percent of the strength of undamaged tissue at four weeks.2 Alternative Medicine Review ◆ Volume 8, Number 4 ◆ 2003 Page 361 Wound Healing Review Vitamins and Minerals Essential to with fractures, tendon damage, or vitamin A defi- Wound Healing ciency may also benefit from perioperative vita- Vitamin A min A supplementation. Additional research is necessary to establish the effectiveness of univer- Vitamin A is required for epithelial and sal perioperative vitamin A supplementation in bone tissue development, cellular differentiation, healthy individuals. and immune system function. Substantial evidence Concern among some practitioners re- supports the use of vitamin A as a perioperative garding the potential toxicity of higher doses of nutritional supplement.5 In addition to facilitating vitamin A has led to uneasiness about using it normal physiological wound repair, Ehrlich and perioperatively. The vast majority of toxicity cases Hunt have shown vitamin A reverses the cortico- have occurred at daily vitamin A dosages of steroid-induced inhibition of cutaneous and fas- 50,000-100,000 IU in adults over a period of 6-8 15 cial wound healing. Vitamin A has also corrected weeks to years. Short-term supplementation of non-steroid induced, post-operative immune de- 25,000 IU daily appears to be safe for most non- 9 pression and improved survival in surgically-in- pregnant adults. Caution must be exercised in duced abdominal sepsis.10 Levenson et al suggest supplementing vitamin A in patients for whom the vitamin A benefits the wound by enhancing the anti-inflammatory effect of steroids is essential, early inflammatory phase, including increasing the such as in rheumatoid arthritis or organ transplants, number of monocytes and macrophages at the as well as in pregnant women and women of child- wound site, modulating collagenase activity, sup- bearing age.5 porting epithelial cell differentiation, and improv- ing localization and stimulation of the immune Vitamin C response.10,11 Ascorbic acid is an essential cofactor for Animal studies show vitamin A may in- the synthesis of collagen, proteoglycans, and other crease both collagen cross-linkage and wound- organic components of the intracellular matrix of breaking strength. Greenwald et al inflicted sur- tissues such as bones, skin, capillary walls, and gical flexor profundus damage and immediate re- other connective tissues. Ascorbic acid deficiency pair on adult chickens. They found chickens that causes abnormal collagen fibers and alterations ate a diet supplemented with vitamin A (150,000 of the intracellular matrix that manifests as cuta- IU/kg chicken chow) demonstrated wound-break- neous lesions, poor adhesion of endothelium cells, ing strength more than double that of controls fed 16 standard chicken chow.12 In addition, rats with and decreased tensile strength of fibrous tissue. dorsal skin incisions and concurrent comminuted Clinical manifestations of ascorbic acid deficiency femoral fractures exhibited delayed cutaneous include bleeding gums, poor immunity, easy bruis- healing. Supplemental vitamin A enhanced wound ing and bleeding, and slow healing of wounds and 17 healing in these animals, demonstrated by in- fractures. Ascorbic acid is necessary for the hy- creased breaking strength of the dorsal skin inci- droxylation of proline and lysine residues in sions in rats fed supplemental vitamin A compared procollagen, which is necessary for its release and to the non-supplemented group. The authors be- subsequent conversion to collagen. Hydroxypro- lieve the improved wound healing is a result of an line also stabilizes the collagen triple-helix struc- 18 13 ture. In addition to collagen production, ascor- increased rate of collagen cross-linkage. 19 Levenson and Demetrio recommend vi- bic acid enhances neutrophil function, increases 20 tamin A supplementation of 25,000 IU daily be- angiogenesis, and functions as a powerful anti- oxidant.21 fore and after elective surgery.14 Research supports Although ascorbic acid is required for perioperative vitamin A supplementation in pa- reparation of damaged tissue, researchers have tients known to be immune depleted or steroid demonstrated the benefit of vitamin C only in vi- treated. Surgical patients with sepsis and those tamin C-deficient individuals using low doses of Page 362 Alternative Medicine Review ◆ Volume 8, Number 4 ◆ 2003
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