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LL-37

Cathelicidin, hCAP-18, FALL-39, CAP-18

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 2
2017 pubmed 15 citations

Immunoprecipitation high performance liquid chromatographic analysis of healing process in chronic suppurative osteomyelitis of the jaw.

Kim. Soung Min SM; Eo. Mi Young MY; Cho. Yun Ju YJ; Kim. Yeon Sook YS; Lee. Suk Keun SK

Key Findings

  • LL‑37 levels rose slightly in the first two days after surgical cleaning of infected jaw bone.
  • Inflammatory proteins tied to bacterial infection (IL‑8, IL‑12, lysozyme) decreased over the same period.
  • Growth factors for tissue repair and bone formation (TGF‑β1, bFGF, OPG, ALP) increased by day two.

Practical Outcomes

  • The study shows LL‑37 naturally spikes during early wound healing, supporting its role in antimicrobial defense. For biohackers, this suggests that boosting LL‑37 (e.g., via vitamin D or certain nutraceuticals) might aid recovery after injuries, but the effect is modest and not yet quantified for supplementation. No specific dosing or protocol is provided, so the finding is mainly informative rather than directly actionable.

Summary

In patients with a serious jaw bone infection, researchers tracked healing by measuring proteins in wound fluid after surgery. They saw a small rise in the antimicrobial peptide LL‑37 along with other immune signals, while inflammation markers linked to bacteria went down. By day two, proteins that help build new bone and tissue were higher, suggesting the wound was healing well.

Abstract

Chronic suppurative osteomyelitis (CSO) of the jaw is one of the most difficult infectious diseases to manage, because it causes progressive bony destruction and is associated with bacterial inhabitation of the sequestra. A combination of antibiotic therapy and surgical debridement is often used to treat CSO. Nevertheless, various systemic conditions can lead to life-threatening complications. The present study aimed to explore the wound healing progress in 16 cases of CSO through protein expression analysis of postoperative exudates (POE) that were collected 6 h, 1 day, and 2 days after saucerization and/or decortication. A bony lesion was removed during surgery and then examined pathologically, and the CSO POE was examined by immunoprecipitation thus high performance chromatography (IP-HPLC). The POE at 6 h was used as a comparative control. Histologically the CSO lesion showed a necrotic granulomatous lesion heavily infiltrated with polymorphonuclear leukocytes, macrophages, and plasma cells, admixed with multiple sequestra inhabited by bacterial colonies. The IP-HPLC analysis displayed a slight increase in innate immunity-related proteins, i.e., NFkB, TNFα, IL-1, IL-6, IL-28, and LL-37, but a gradual decrease of bacteria-related inflammatory proteins, i.e., IL-8, IL-12, CD31, CD68, and lysozyme. The angiogenesis-related proteins, i.e., VEGF-A and VEGF-C, were slightly decreased but TGF-β1 and bFGF were markedly increased on day 2. The osteogenesis-related proteins, i.e., OPG and ALP, were slightly increased, while the osteoclastogenesis-related protein, RANKL was slightly decreased compared to the control. These findings indicate that the infected CSO undergoes a rapid wound healing process with active osteogenesis and a gradual decrease in bacteria-related inflammation, predicting a favorable prognosis after surgery. Moreover, IP-HPLC can be useful in monitoring the POE and wound healing processes during the postoperative period.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2017

Date

2017-10-27T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.jcms.2017.10.017

Citations

15

References

32