Activated Protein C Utilises Protease Activated Receptors And Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor To Heal Wounds
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$436,882.00
Summary
Chronic leg ulcers are a major burden to the individual sufferer and to the health system. We have discovered that activated protein C (APC) potently stimulates wound healing in the laboratory and now have exciting positive results from a small pilot clinical trial showing that applying APC solution to leg ulcers also helps healing in patients. This study plans to discover how APC works at the molecular level.
Modulating Sphingolipid Signalling To Enhance Wound Healing
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$698,447.00
Summary
Impaired wound healing is a major problem for diabetics, who often suffer with chronic unresolved wounds with serious effects on their quality of life and mortality. We have recently discovered a new pathway involving sphingolipids that shows great promise to improve wound healing in diabetics. In this project we will examine the targeting of this pathway, using existing and newly developed agents, to improve wound healing in advanced pre-clinical models of diabetes.
Identification Of Early Predictors Of Non-healing Venous Leg Ulcers And Development Of A Risk Assessment Tool
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$43,271.00
Summary
Venous leg ulcers make up about 70% of all chronic leg ulcers and are often debilitating. This project aims to examine the relationships between physiological and psychosocial variables in patients with chronic venous leg ulcers in relation to healing at 24 weeks thereby guiding the development of a risk assessment tool that will then be tested. Identification of risk factors for non-healing at 24 weeks would offer an opportunity for clinicians to be able to determine realistic outcomes.
Mechanics Of Normal And Disordered Gastric Emptying Studied Using Simultaneous Ultrasound And High Resolution Manometry
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$145,626.00
Summary
Optimal digestion and absorption relies on the stomach breaking down food and delivering it to the small intestine at an optimal rate. Abnormalities in the processes controlling the stomach's processing of food may lead to malnutrition, gastrointestinal symptoms or unpredictable drug absorption, and are commonly seen in patients with diabetes mellitus, gastrointestinal reflux disease and nonulcer dyspepsia, or following stomach surgery. Currently our understanding of the way the stomach empties ....Optimal digestion and absorption relies on the stomach breaking down food and delivering it to the small intestine at an optimal rate. Abnormalities in the processes controlling the stomach's processing of food may lead to malnutrition, gastrointestinal symptoms or unpredictable drug absorption, and are commonly seen in patients with diabetes mellitus, gastrointestinal reflux disease and nonulcer dyspepsia, or following stomach surgery. Currently our understanding of the way the stomach empties food is incomplete, and there is little information as to the mechanisms by which diseases cause abnormal stomach emptying. Recent developments in recording methods mean that we can now simultaneously measure stomach contractions, the pressures these generate and flow from the stomach. This information is synchronised and displayed for analysis using computer techniques. In this project these novel methods will be used initially to examine the normal processes by which meals with a variety of compositions and consistencies empty from the stomach. This will provide information as to which aspects of the way the stomach functions are important for breaking down food into particles, and which aspects control the flow of food from the stomach into the intestine. The mechanisms by which the rate of emptying of the stomach is controlled by feedback signals caused by the presence of foodstuffs in the small intestine will be investigated by examining the effects of infusing nutrients into the intestine on the motions of the stomach wall, pressures within the stomach and the passage of stomach contents into the small intestine. The mechanism of action of drugs and diseases which slow stomach emptying will then be examined by measuring the movements, pressures and emptying of the stomach in subjects receiving the drug, or in patients with dibetes, and comparing this information with the processes observed during normal stomach emptying.Read moreRead less
Rotator cuff (RC) tendon disease is a huge burden on the healthcare system in Australia and a major cause of morbidity in our aging population. Disorders of the RC are the most common cause of shoulder pain, which accounts for 1.2% of all visits to general practitioners. The prevalence of RC pathology increases with age to reach 30-50% by the seventh decade of life and a staggering 70-80% by the ninth. While most cases are treated conservatively, there are over 12,000 RC repair surgeries perform ....Rotator cuff (RC) tendon disease is a huge burden on the healthcare system in Australia and a major cause of morbidity in our aging population. Disorders of the RC are the most common cause of shoulder pain, which accounts for 1.2% of all visits to general practitioners. The prevalence of RC pathology increases with age to reach 30-50% by the seventh decade of life and a staggering 70-80% by the ninth. While most cases are treated conservatively, there are over 12,000 RC repair surgeries performed annually in Australia, with patients being committed to a prolonged convalescence. There are no drug therapies to specifically treat RC or other tendon injuries and many surgical repairs fail within 12 months. The limited treatment options for RC and other tendon disorders stems from a lack of knowledge of the molecular changes that precede and lead to rupture. It is recognised that the content of sulphated sugars or glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) on proteoglycans in tendon is the strongest predictor of the tisues strength. Accumulation of GAG is a well-recognised feature of torn tendons in man. The changes in proteoglycan synthesis and breakdown that precede and lead to tendon rupture have not been defined. We have developed a new model of shoulder tendon injury in sheep that induces regional degeneration mimicking that seen in human RC disorders. We have found changes in expression of specific proteoglycans and their degradative enzymes in early tendon disease. The current project will use this model in combination with a novel culture system and recently developed genetically modified mice to determine for the first time the changes that occur over time in proteoglycan metabolism that are responsible for tendon degeneration that leads to rupture. Successful completion of these studies will identify biomarkers to monitor disease progression and a platform for the development of new therapeutic strategies to treat this debilitating disorder.Read moreRead less
Non-invasive Electrical Nerve Stimulation To Improve Healing Of Chronic Venous Leg Ulcers
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$206,210.00
Summary
Chronic venous leg ulcers are common in the elderly. They often last for many months or years, causing much suffering and expense (currently around $600,000,000 per year in Australia). As more and more Australians live into advanced age, more and more people will be troubled by leg ulcers, particularly as the likelihood of having a leg ulcer increases markedly in the very old. We have developed a painless, cheap treatment that improves wound healing. The treatment consists of electrical stimulat ....Chronic venous leg ulcers are common in the elderly. They often last for many months or years, causing much suffering and expense (currently around $600,000,000 per year in Australia). As more and more Australians live into advanced age, more and more people will be troubled by leg ulcers, particularly as the likelihood of having a leg ulcer increases markedly in the very old. We have developed a painless, cheap treatment that improves wound healing. The treatment consists of electrical stimulation of nerves that supply the wound. Low frequency current is passed through the skin from small battery powered stimulators. We have tested this technique in laboratory animals and in just a few older people with diabetes and have shown it is remarkably effective. We now plan to test this technique properly in a large study in older adults. If successful, the electrical stimulation could result in healing of wounds in relatively few weeks that otherwise would not heal for many months. Much suffering and expense would be avoided. As people age, nerve function deteriotes. Another part of the project will explore whether electrical nerve stimulation can improve damaged nerves themselves. This will provide interesting scientific insight about nerve repair and could lead to treatments for peripheral neuropathy that occurs in diabetes and other medical conditions. Australia needs to act on this now because the number of people aged over 65 will increase from around 2.3 million at present to over 6 million in the next half century. The increase in those over 85 will be even more marked with numbers increasing four fold to over one million people. Many of these people will experience severe impairment of their quality of life from leg ulcers that could be avoided, or at least minimized if a successful treatment is developed and made available to them. Similarly, much unnecessary expense could be avoided.Read moreRead less