Introduction: Chronic wounds are a great burden to care-givers and patients alike and are the main cause of many preventable amputations. Such wounds are treated with wound dressings but providing a wound environment that is conducive to proper wound healing is not always possible with such dressings. Absorbatox™ is a natural zeolite that has been manipulated to increase its cationic exchange capacity and has its main functionality as a potential wound healing agent in its strong capillary action. This quality enables the zeolite to absorb excess wound exudate and thus prevent wound infection and maceration. Absorbatox™ was characterised to determine its effects on wound healing. Methods: The physical characterisation of two grades of Absorbatox™ - granular and micronised - was conducted using nitrogen adsorption to determine pore size and surface area, and laser particle sizing to determine the particle sizes of the Absorbatox™ particles. Full-thickness wounds of 8 x 8 mm were created on the backs of pigs and treated with Absorbatox™, a positive and a negative control. The wound dimensions were measured and recorded. The wounds were then excised on selected days of each phase of wound healing and fixed in formalin. The wound sections were analysed by mass spectrometry imaging and abundant wound proteins were identified from the tryptic digests using BLAST against the Swiss-Prot database. Results: The surface areas of the micronised and granular Absorbatox™ were 14.43 and 11.23 m2/g, respectively. The micronised Absorbatox™ particle sizes ranged between 0.8 µm to approximately 300 µm with an average pore diameter of 28.2 nm. The granular Absorbatox™ particle sizes ranged between 2 µm and 875 µm with average pore diameters of 43.8 nm. Absorbatox™ showed better wound healing by delaying wound contraction and causing more rapid shallowing of the wound depths compared to the negative control. The difference observed in the wound healing rates of the Absorbatox™-treated and positive control groups were statistically significant and the histological evaluations of the wounds treated with Absorbatox™ showed wound closures that were associated with qualities that more closely resembled normal, healthy tissue than the positive control wounds. The protein activity in the trypsin-digested tissue including within the wound area and the surrounding healthy tissue was successfully imaged using MALDI-MSI. BLAST software was used at an e-value of 30 to identify possible proteins from the tryptic digests and were identified as proteins involved in wound healing. Discussion: Micronised Absorbatox™ treated wounds showed more rapid healing than the other treatments most likely due to the smaller particles and pores which results in strong capillary action to absorb excess exudate. Mass spectrometry imaging allowed monitoring of the protein fluctuations that occur during wound healing. The proteins detected were then identified using BLAST and MASCOT database comparison tools which identified that the abundant proteins detected by mass spectrometry were not those typically observed in wound healing but rather those involved in molecular aspects of wound healing like nerve regeneration, cell proliferation, survival, and migration. / Dissertation (MSc)--University of Pretoria / Pharmacology / unrestricted
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:netd.ac.za/oai:union.ndltd.org:up/oai:repository.up.ac.za:2263/31616 |
Date | 10 July 2013 |
Creators | Mncube, Khulekani |
Contributors | Cromarty, Allan Duncan, khulekani.mncube@gmail.com |
Source Sets | South African National ETD Portal |
Language | English |
Detected Language | English |
Type | Dissertation |
Rights | © 2013, University of Pretoria. All rights reserved. The copyright in this work vests in the University of Pretoria. No part of this work may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, without the prior written permission of the University of Pretoria. |
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