Selected article for: "appropriate support and long term"

Author: Chermnykh, Elina S; Kiseleva, Ekaterina V; Rogovaya, Olga S; Rippa, Aleksandra L; Vasiliev, Andrey V; Vorotelyak, Ekaterina A
Title: Tissue-engineered biological dressing accelerates skin wound healing in mice via formation of provisional connective tissue.
  • Cord-id: 7f6e1ear
  • Document date: 2018_1_1
  • ID: 7f6e1ear
    Snippet: Despite recent advances in bioengineered therapies, wound healing remains a serious clinical problem. In acute full-thickness wounds, it is desirable to replace both the damaged dermis and epidermis in a single procedure. This approach requires appropriate properties of tissue-engineered dressings to support simultaneous regenerative processes in the dermis and epidermis while they are temporally separated in the natural wound healing process. In this study, a collagen-based scaffold inhabited b
    Document: Despite recent advances in bioengineered therapies, wound healing remains a serious clinical problem. In acute full-thickness wounds, it is desirable to replace both the damaged dermis and epidermis in a single procedure. This approach requires appropriate properties of tissue-engineered dressings to support simultaneous regenerative processes in the dermis and epidermis while they are temporally separated in the natural wound healing process. In this study, a collagen-based scaffold inhabited by skin cells was employed. Its ability to stimulate the skin repair of full-thickness excisional splinting wounds in a murine model was evaluated in comparison with that of acellular collagen and commercially available gelatin porous sponge Spongostan®. The study showed that cell-based skin equivalent promoted the immediate filling of the wound bed and provided simultaneous reorganization of the dermal component into highly vascularized granulation-like tissue and rapid epithelialization, thus improving the quality of healing. Inflammation was delayed and less pronounced. In contrast, acellular collagen and especially Spongostan® failed to demonstrate similar results. The porous structure of Spongostan® prevented effective long-term epithelialization and impeded the formation of an adequate connective tissue at the wound bed.

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