Exercise-induced Sweat Promotes Wound Healing in Diabetic Foot Ulcers

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Exercise-induced Sweat Promotes Wound Healing in Diabetic Foot Ulcers

Authors

Zhao, M.; Tong, Y.; Yao, H.; Cao, J.; Liang, T.; Fei, Q.; Liang, M.; Yang, B.; Sun, M. S.; Wang, C.; Zhang, J.; Cui, Q.

Abstract

Persistent hyperglycemia impairs wound healing in diabetic patients, and severe cases may even lead to disability or death. Glycemic control alone cannot effectively prevent the occurrence of diabetic foot ulcers, a serious complication of diabetes. However, safe, efficient, and cost-effective therapies remain unavailable and are urgently needed. Using a novel sports medicine paradigm, we predicted, based on reverse-transcriptomics, that exercise-induced sweat has the potential to promote would healing in diabetic foot ulcers. Subsequent animal experiments demonstrated that sweat can indeed promote re-epithelialization and collagen deposition, upregulate the expression of the proliferation marker Ki-67, the angiogenesis marker CD31, and -SMA, and significantly accelerate wound healing in a mouse model of diabetic foot ulcers. This study provides a new direction for sports medicine and offers a novel therapeutic strategy for patients with diabetic foot ulcers.

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