TY - JOUR
T1 - PDE and agent based simulation approaches to Ischemic Dermal Wound Closure
AU - Lazebnik, Teddy
AU - Friedman, Avner
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2026 Lazebnik, Friedman. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
PY - 2026/5
Y1 - 2026/5
N2 - Ischemic dermal wounds present a significant medical challenge, especially in the case where the wound does not close in an expected time, typically 30 days. We developed two very different mathematical models of symmetric flat wounds, one by Partial Differential Equations (PDE) and another by Agent-based Simulation (ABS) with some parameters taken from the PDE model. The models include the important role of keratinocytes who make 90% of the cells in the epidermis. We used both models to assess the effectiveness of oxygen therapy in wound closure for different levels α of ischemia; ischemia increases as α increases from 0 to 1. We found that (i) the decreasing profiles of the radius R(t) of the open wound derived by the two models are in a high degree of agreement, and (ii) standard hyperbaric and topical oxygen therapies effectively achieve complete closure of the wound in expected time in cases where the ischemic level is not too high, i.e., α ≤ 0.3 under standard hyperbaric therapy and α ≤ 0.5 under continuous topical oxygen therapy. These findings provide a quantitative framework for evaluating ischemic wound healing and therapeutic interventions.
AB - Ischemic dermal wounds present a significant medical challenge, especially in the case where the wound does not close in an expected time, typically 30 days. We developed two very different mathematical models of symmetric flat wounds, one by Partial Differential Equations (PDE) and another by Agent-based Simulation (ABS) with some parameters taken from the PDE model. The models include the important role of keratinocytes who make 90% of the cells in the epidermis. We used both models to assess the effectiveness of oxygen therapy in wound closure for different levels α of ischemia; ischemia increases as α increases from 0 to 1. We found that (i) the decreasing profiles of the radius R(t) of the open wound derived by the two models are in a high degree of agreement, and (ii) standard hyperbaric and topical oxygen therapies effectively achieve complete closure of the wound in expected time in cases where the ischemic level is not too high, i.e., α ≤ 0.3 under standard hyperbaric therapy and α ≤ 0.5 under continuous topical oxygen therapy. These findings provide a quantitative framework for evaluating ischemic wound healing and therapeutic interventions.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105038217018
U2 - 10.1371/journal.pone.0340624
DO - 10.1371/journal.pone.0340624
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C2 - 42090456
AN - SCOPUS:105038217018
SN - 1932-6203
VL - 21
JO - PLOS ONE
JF - PLOS ONE
IS - 5 May
M1 - e0340624
ER -