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The purpose of this study is to investigate the effect of subcutaneous injection of botulinum toxin A on wound healing caused by lower extremity ischemia.
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Tissues below the calf are governed by blood flow from the anterior tibial artery, peroneal artery, and posterior tibial artery. When an ulcer occurs due to acute lower extremity ischemia, one of the three blood vessels is blocked by a blood clot, or when the blood vessel is narrowed due to perivascular inflammation, such as Buerger's disease, it occurs in a subacute or chronic form. In particular, in the case of elderly patients with ulcers or diabetic feet due to lower extremity ischemia, the symptoms are often worsened by chronic narrowing of blood vessels due to arteriosclerosis or blockage by blood clots. To treat this, prostaglandin or antithrombotic drugs are taken, and blood flow is resumed through stent surgery, but in the lower extremities, the recurrence rate is relatively high because the blood vessels are smaller than the iliac artery, femoral artery, and popliteal artery.
Botulinum toxin is known to have a positive effect on wound healing and blood flow improvement. Botulinum toxin has been published several times in papers showing its spasmolytic effect by participating in the radiographic hip osteoarthritis Ras homolog A (RhoA)/Rock-assisted protein kinase (ROCK) pathway. In addition, botulinum toxin has a vasodilating effect related to the calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) pathway, and is involved in increasing vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) from NO-mediated angiogenesis, inhibiting vasoconstriction, increasing blood flow rate, and promoting angiogenesis.
In this study, in patients with chronic wounds on the feet, whose lower extremity blood vessels circulate mainly through collateral circulation, subcutaneous injection of Botulinum toxin in and around the wound improves blood flow around the wound and confirms the degree of wound healing.
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15 participants in 1 patient group
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Hiisun J, Dr
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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