Epidermal function is regulated by numerous exogenous and endogenous factors, including age, psychological stress, certain skin disorders, ultraviolet irradiation and pollution, and epidermal function itself can regulate cutaneous and extracutaneous functions. The biophysical properties of the stratum corneum reflect the status of both epidermal function and systemic conditions. Type 2 diabetes in both murine models and humans displays alterations in epidermal functions, including reduced levels of stratum corneum hydration and increased epidermal permeability as well as delayed permeability barrier recovery, which can all provoke and exacerbate cutaneous inflammation. Because inflammation plays a pathogenic role in type 2 diabetes, a therapy that improves epidermal functions could be an alternative approach to mitigating type 2 diabetes and its associated cutaneous disorders.
CITATION STYLE
Man, M. Q., Wakefield, J. S., Mauro, T. M., & Elias, P. M. (2022, September 1). Alterations in epidermal function in type 2 diabetes: Implications for the management of this disease. Journal of Diabetes. John Wiley and Sons Inc. https://doi.org/10.1111/1753-0407.13303
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