New research from Chalmers
University of Technology and the University of Freiburg shows that wounds on
cultured skin cells heal three times faster when stimulated with electric
current. The project was recently granted more funding so the research can get
one step closer to the market and the benefit of patients.
Chronic wounds are a major health
problem for diabetic patients and the elderly – in extreme cases they can even
lead to amputation. Using electric stimulation, researchers in a project at
Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden, and the University of Freiburg, Germany,
have developed a method that speeds up the healing process, making wounds heal
three times faster.
There is an old Swedish saying that one should never
neglect a small wound or a friend in need. For most people, a small wound does
not lead to any serious complications, but many common diagnoses make wound
healing far more difficult. People with diabetes, spinal injuries or poor blood
circulation have impaired wound healing ability. This means a greater risk of
infection and chronic wounds – which in the long run can lead to such serious
consequences as amputation.
Now a group of researchers at Chalmers and the
University of Freiburg have developed a method using electric stimulation to
speed up the healing process.
“Chronic wounds are a huge societal
problem that we don’t hear a lot about. Our discovery of a method that may heal
wounds up to three times faster can be a game changer for diabetic and elderly
people, among others, who often suffer greatly from wounds that won’t heal,”
says Maria Asplund, Associate Professor of Bioelectronics at Chalmers
University of Technology and head of research on the project.
Electric
guidance of cells for faster healing
The researchers worked from an old hypothesis that
electric stimulation of damaged skin can be used to heal wounds. The idea is
that skin cells are electrotactic, which means that they directionally
‘migrate’ in electric fields. This means that if an electric field is placed in
a petri dish with skin cells, the cells stop moving randomly and start moving
in the same direction. The researchers investigated how this principle can be
used to electrically guide the cells in order to make wounds heal faster. Using
a tiny engineered chip, the researchers were able to compare wound healing in
artificial skin, stimulating one wound with electricity and letting one heal
without electricity. The differences were striking.
“We were able to show that the old hypothesis about
electric stimulation can be used to make wounds heal significantly faster. In
order to study exactly how this works for wounds, we developed a kind of
biochip on which we cultured skin cells, which we then made tiny wounds in.
Then we stimulated one wound with an electric field, which clearly led to it
healing three times as fast as the wound that healed without electric
stimulation,” Asplund says.
Hope for
diabetes patients
In the study, the
researchers also focused on wound healing in connection with diabetes, a
growing health problem worldwide. One in 11 adults today has some form of
diabetes according to the World Health Organization (WHO) and the International
Diabetes Federation.
“We’ve looked at diabetes models of wounds and
investigated whether our method could be effective even in those cases. We saw
that when we mimic diabetes in the cells, the wounds on the chip heal very
slowly. However, with electric stimulation we can increase the speed of healing
so that the diabetes-affected cells almost correspond to healthy skin cells,”
Asplund says.
Individualised
treatment the next step
The Chalmers researchers recently received a large
grant which will allow them to continue their research in the field, and in the
long run enable the development of wound healing products for consumers on the
market. Similar products have come out before, but more basic research is
required to develop effective products that generate enough electric field strength
and stimulate in the right way for each individual. This is where Asplund and
her colleagues come into the picture:
“We are now looking at how different skin cells
interact during stimulation, to take a step closer to a realistic wound. We
want to develop a concept to be able to ‘scan’ wounds and adapt the stimulation
based on the individual wound. We are convinced that this is the key to
effectively helping individuals with slow-healing wounds in the future,”
Asplund says.
More about the
study:
• “Bioelectronic
microfluidic wound healing: a platform for investigating direct current
stimulation of injured cell collectives” was published in the journal
Lab on a Chip. The article was written by Sebastian Shaner, Anna Savelyeva,
Anja Kvartuh, Nicole Jedrusik, Lukas Matter, José Leal and Maria Asplund. The
researchers work at the University of Freiburg in Germany and Chalmers
University of Technology.
• In their study, the researchers showed that wound healing on artificial skin
stimulated with electric current was three times faster than on the skin that
healed naturally. The electric field was low, about 200 mV/mm, and did not have
a negative impact on the cells.
• The method the researchers developed is based on a microfluidic biochip on
which artificial skin can be grown, stimulated with an electric current and
studied in an effective and controlled manner. The concept allows researchers
to conduct multiple experiments in parallel on the same chip.
• The research project began in 2018 and is funded by the European Research
Council (ERC). The project was recently granted new funding so the research can
get to market and benefit patients.
Source: How electricity can heal wounds three times as fast | Chalmers
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