Immunohistochemical evaluation of p63, E-cadherin, Collagen i and III expression in lower limb wound healing under honey

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Abstract

Honey is recognized traditionally for its medicinal properties and also appreciated as a topical healing agent for infected and noninfected wounds. This study evaluates impact of honey-based occlusive dressing on nonhealing (nonresponding to conventional antibiotics) traumatic lower limb wounds (n=34) through clinicopathological and immunohistochemical (e.g., expression of p63, E-cadherin, and Collagen I and III) evaluations to enrich the scientific validation. Clinical findings noted the nonadherence of honey dressing with remarkable chemical debridement and healing progression within 11-15 days of postintervention. Histopathologically, in comparison to preintervention biopsies, the postintervention tissues of wound peripheries demonstrated gradual normalization of epithelial and connective tissue features with significant changes in p 63 + epithelial cell population, reappearance of membranous E-cadherin (P

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Chatterjee, J., Barui, A., Banerjee, P., Das, R. K., Basu, S. K., & Dhara, S. (2011). Immunohistochemical evaluation of p63, E-cadherin, Collagen i and III expression in lower limb wound healing under honey. Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine, 2011. https://doi.org/10.1155/2011/239864

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