• Title of article

    Principles and practices for treatment of cutaneous wounds with cultured skin substitutes

  • Author/Authors

    Steven T. Boyce، نويسنده , , Glenn D. Warden، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2002
  • Pages
    12
  • From page
    445
  • To page
    456
  • Abstract
    Background: Skin substitutes prepared from cultured skin cells and biopolymers may reduce requirements for donor skin autograft, and have been shown to be effective in treatment of excised burns, burn scars, and congenital skin lesions. Data Sources: Cultured skin substitutes (CSS) generate skin phenotypes (epidermal barrier, basement membrane) in the laboratory, and restore tissue function and systemic homeostasis. Healed skin is smooth, soft and strong, but develops irregular degrees of pigmentation. Quantitative analysis demonstrates that CSS closes 67 times the area of the donor skin, compared to less than 4 times for split-thickness skin autograft. Conclusions: CSS reduce requirements for donor skin autograft for closure of excised, full-thickness cutaneous wounds, and demonstrate qualitative outcome that is not different from meshed, split-thickness autograft. These results offer reductions in morbidity and mortality for the treatment of burns and chronic wounds, and for cutaneous reconstruction
  • Keywords
    Wound closure , Cultured skin , Skin grafts , Burns
  • Journal title
    The American Journal of Surgery
  • Serial Year
    2002
  • Journal title
    The American Journal of Surgery
  • Record number

    621384