PMID-28370978 – GHK-Cu-Liposomes Accelerate Scald Wound Healing

PMID-28370978 – GHK-Cu-Liposomes Accelerate Scald Wound Healing

Wang X et al. "GHK-Cu-liposomes accelerate scald wound healing in mice by promoting cell proliferation and angiogenesis," Wound Repair and Regeneration, 2017;25(2):270-278. doi:10.1111/wrr.12520

Quick Reference

Property Value
PMID 28370978
DOI 10.1111/wrr.12520
Year 2017
Journal Wound Repair and Regeneration
Study Type Animal in vivo
Evidence Level V
Sample Mice with scald (burn) wounds
Peptide(s) Studied GHK-Cu

Key Findings

  • GHK-Cu encapsulated in liposomes enhanced scald wound healing in mice
  • Increased HUVEC proliferation rate by 33.1% vs. free GHK-Cu
  • Shortened healing time to 14 days with enhanced angiogenesis markers
  • Liposomal delivery improved GHK-Cu bioavailability at wound site
  • Enhanced both cell proliferation and blood vessel formation

Study Design

Controlled animal study. Mice received scald (burn) wounds and were treated with GHK-Cu-liposomes, free GHK-Cu, or controls. Outcomes: wound closure rate, histology, angiogenesis markers, cell proliferation assays.

Limitations

  • Mouse burn model; human burn healing differs
  • Liposomal formulation may not reflect injectable GHK-Cu products
  • Single wound type (scald); applicability to other wound types unknown

Clinical Relevance

Published in the priority journal Wound Repair and Regeneration. The liposomal delivery enhancement is relevant for formulation science. Demonstrates GHK-Cu's wound healing in a clinically relevant burn model. Supports the GLOW blend's wound healing rationale.

Related

#research #animal-in-vivo #evidence-level-V