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Arginine and Proline Enriched Diet May Speed Wound Healing in Diabetes
– Reported, November 15, 2012
French researchers found that diabetic rats on a high protein diet with arginine and proline — specific molecules found in protein — showed better wound healing over rats fed either standard or high protein food without arginine and proline supplementation.
The article is entitled “Arginine plus proline supplementation elicits metabolic adaptation that favors wound healing in diabetic rats.” It appears in the online edition of the American Journal of Physiology — Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology published by the American Physiological Society.
Researchers divided 18 rats into three groups that were either fed a standard diet, a high-protein diet, or a high protein diet supplemented with arginine and proline (ARG+PRO). On the first day of the experiment, each rat was given an incision, under which a sponge was placed in order to collect wound-healing fluid. To assess skin regrowth and healing, researchers also removed two full-thickness sections of skin from the rats’ backs each day from day 1 until day 5, when the experiment ended.
At the end of the experiment, the rats’ blood was analyzed for blood sugar, insulin, and amino acid concentrations. The wounds on their backs were examined for skin regrowth and development of new blood vessels. And, finally, macrophages were collected from the sponges and analyzed for indications of cytokine stimulation and pro-inflammatory activity.
Rats on both high protein diets had better nitrogen balance than those on the standard diet. However, the wounds of the rats on the ARG+PRO diet showed more new blood vessel growth on day 5. New blood vessel growth is an essential part of wound healing as the blood vessels supply nutrition and oxygen to growing tissue.
Furthermore, the macrophages in the ARG+PRO group showed less cytokine stimulation and pro-inflammatory activity than the other groups. This indicates a better environment for promoting wound healing, as inflammation slows the healing process.
The researchers did not find a difference in skin regrowth between groups, but their findings may be limited because of the small number of rats in the study. Additionally, researchers did not measure markers of collagen deposition in the wound, and the study cannot confirm the beneficial effect of arginine on collagen deposition and wound breaking strength reported in previous research.
This study suggests that arginine and proline supplementation could offer new hope for effective treatment in diabetic patients with chronic wounds. This is a promising new area of research where there are no existing effective treatments for these patients.
The study was conducted by Agathe Raynaud-Simon, Linda Belabed, J. Marc, Luc Cynober, and Sylviane Darquy of the Department of Experimental, Metabolic and Clinical Biology, Paris Descartes University, Paris, France and Gilles Le Naour and Frederique Capron of Pitié-Salpétrière Hospital AP-HP, Faculty of Medicine Pierre-et-Marie-Curie, Paris.
This study was supported by an unrestricted grant from Nestlé Clinical Nutrition.
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