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Moist dressing coverage supports proliferation and migration of transplanted skin micrografts in full-thickness porcine wounds

Authors :
Pejman Aflaki
Florian Hackl
J. Rodrigo Diaz-Siso
Philipp Gerner
Elizabeth Kiwanuka
Elof Eriksson
Justin Philip
Johan P.E. Junker
Geoffroy C. Sisk
Edward J. Caterson
Source :
Burns. 40:274-280
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2014.

Abstract

Transplantation of skin micrografts in a 1:100 ratio regenerate the epidermis of full-thickness wounds in pigs within 14 days in a wet environment. The aim of the current study was to combine micrografts and commercially available moist dressings. We hypothesized that micrografts regenerate the epidermis when covered with a moist dressing. 5cm×5cm and 10cm×10cm full-thickness wounds were created on the backs of pigs. Wounds were transplanted with 0.8mm×0.8mm micrografts created from a split-thickness skin graft in a 1:100 ratio. 5cm×5cm wounds were treated with wound chambers, moist dressings or dry gauze (non-transplanted control group). 10cm×10cm wounds were compared to non-transplanted wounds, both covered with moist dressings. Reepithelialization was assessed in biopsies from day 10, 14 and 18 post-transplantation. 5cm×5cm transplanted wounds covered with moist dressings showed 69.5±20.6% reepithelialization by day 14 and 90.5±10.4% by day 18, similar to wounds covered with a wound chamber (63.9±16.7 and 86.2±11.9%, respectively). 18 days post-transplantation, 10cm×10cm transplanted wounds covered with moist dressings showed 66.1±10.3% reepithelialization, whereas nontransplanted wounds covered with moist dressings were 40.6±6.6% reepithelialized. We conclude that micrografts combined with clinically available moist dressings regenerate the epidermis of full-thickness wounds.

Details

ISSN :
03054179
Volume :
40
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Burns
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d924f2f5659eb90dab38e2e58df30a2a
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.burns.2013.06.002