Research on Vitamin B5 (pantothenic acid) and wound healing does not appear to be directly supported by the single study provided here, which investigated gut microbiome changes in cancer cachexia using a mouse model and computational simulation tools — a topic unrelated to pantothenic acid or wound healing specifically. Studies indicate that the available evidence linked here does not allow for a meaningful synthesis of Vitamin B5's role in wound healing, and readers should be aware that this particular body of cited literature does not address that relationship. The sole study noted takes a neutral directional stance and focuses on microbial metabolite production in a cachexia context, offering no data on pantothenic acid supplementation or skin repair outcomes. Those seeking research on Vitamin B5 and wound healing would benefit from consulting literature more directly focused on that topic before drawing any conclusions.
Citations from PubMed and preprint sources. Match score (0-100) reflects automated search ranking, not clinical appraisal.
| Title | Type | Year | Direction | Match |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Computational metabolic modeling unveils gut microbiome’s role in metabolic s... | Other | 2024 | Neutral | 85 |