Introduction
Type 1 diabetes mellitus (DM1) is a chronic illness that results from inadequate insulin production by the pancreas.1 In 2017, there were 451 million individuals worldwide who suffered from DM.2 The incidence of DM1 is estimated to increase to nearly 700 million by 2045. Approximately 50% of all persons living with DM are unidentified.2
People who suffer from DM are at greater risk for diabetic foot ulcers (DFUs). DFUs are the result of concurrent activities of many causative sources. Persistent hyperglycemia, peripheral neuropathy, ischemia from peripheral vasculopathy, immunosuppression and infection are the major pathological elements that lead to foot deformities and DFUs.3 Of note, any DFU is assumed to have blood vessel deficiencies, even without direct verification.4 In addition to metabolic aberrations, DM causes overproduction of mitochondrial superoxide and reactive oxygen species (ROS) in endothelial cells, which further leads to reduced angiogenesis and ischemia.5
Lower limb amputation (LLA) occurs in 5%–24% of patients with DFUs within 180–545 days after the initial diagnosis.6 Worldwide, DFUs are the most common complications that lead to huge financial problems for the patients, their relatives and the public.7 The total clinical cost for managing diabetic lower limb complications in the USA is approximately US$10.5 billion in addition to the cost of DM management.8
Approximately 50% of LLA occur in patients with DM, and most are from microbial DFU.9 The prevalence of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) in infected DFU is 15%–30%.10 Among microbes S. aureus is the most prevalent. Overuse of antibiotics to combat infected diabetic ulcers have led to an explosion of antibiotic resistance with delayed macrophage response, which poses a serious threat to global public health.11
DFU is the main medical threat due a lack of knowledge about its pathophysiology.12 Weakened wound repair in DM is identified by reduced angiogenesis, decreased endothelial progenitor cell recruitment, reduced fibroblast and keratinocyte proliferation and migration and delayed macrophage response.12 13 The capability to quickly repair the wound is demanding and is the crucial aim for a cure for DFU.14 Both protective and curative measures consist of the use of bactericidal mediators, wet absorbent and bioengineered gauzes, vacuum-assisted closure, Regranex PDGF gel and unloading to stimulate the repair process.15 However, none of these measures show any distinct advantage over the others; the cure of chronic wounds and DFU remains problematic and prolonged.14 15 Thus, new approaches are urgently needed to combat infection and stimulate tissue repair in diabetic wounds. Concentrated efforts on the effectiveness of prognostic laboratory experiments, technologies for new cures and selective and focused approaches are required.4
Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) can effectively enhance repair of wound. The ability of MSCs to differentiate into various cell lines and their low immunogenicity make them highly attractive for therapeutic use in DFUs. MSCs stimulate cell migration, new blood vessel formation, re-epithelialization and new wound bed formation and maturation. In addition, they reduce the inflammatory response, enhance wound contraction, and can improve healing.16
Adipose-derived stem cells (ADSs) are great replacements of bone marrow (BM) MSCs because they can be simply harvested from adipose tissue and can grow in a culture system. Published investigational probes have indicated that ADSs could improve wound repair via boosting re-epithelialization and new wound bed formation. They modulate the inflammatory reaction, have an anti-apoptotic impact and secrete angiogenic growth factors.17
Probes using animal simulation18 and studies in humans19 have been performed to display the probable favorable impacts of ADS in wounds and ischemic organs in animals and in patients who suffer from DM. Despite the current achievements, several chief obstacles remain before they can be effectively used to benefit diabetic ADS in wound repair. First, the aberrant in vivo micro milieu of people with DM adversely affects the therapeutic biological action of the ADSs on wound repair.20 Second, the systemic deficiency of the healing potential of diabetic ADS in vivo.21 Third, ADS is physiologically damaged.22 Finally, ADSs cannot provide a blood vessel complex. Consequently, these diabetic ADS are weak in stimulating new blood vessel formation and soft tissue repair.23
Photobiomodulation (PBM) decreases pain, and inflammation, and enhances injury repair, and prevents cell and tissue damage.24 We believe that PBM could overcome these ADS deficiencies and synergize its positive effects in stimulating tissue repair. PBM has long been used as a means to increase circulation and improve tissue repair by enhancing new blood vessel formation through increases in vascular endothelial growth factor release and hypoxia-induced factor-1α expression.25 PBM has been shown to improve the angiogenic impact of ADS by increasing its viability and encouraging the release of cytokines in the cutaneous flap,26 ischemic limbs27 and injured skin.28
More than 100 recognized factors are involved in the insufficient skin injury repair observed in people with DM.29 The therapeutic use of a combination of beneficial mediators and biomodulators appears to be of benefit in non-healing wounds; they are likely to show a synergistic effect and can improve the success of a cure for different wound simulations. In recent experiments, Bayat group have reported the capability of the combination of PBM and conditioned media (CM) from human bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells (hBM-MSCs) to stimulate repair of weakened wounds in a rat model of streptozotocin (STZ)-induced DM1. The outcomes of these experiments showed that PBM+CM prompted anti-inflammatory and angiogenic actions, and accelerated skin injury repair in a DM1 simulation of an MRSA-infected skin injury.30 The combination of CM and PBM revealed a synergistic influence.31 Here, we intend to assess the impact of PBM and ADS treatments, alone and in combination, on the maturation step of a repair course of ischemic, delayed healing, and infected wound simulations in rats with DM1. The combined application of PBM and ADS could advance the repairing course and assist with healing severe cases of DFUs in people with DM.