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Related Concept Videos

Phases of Wound Repair01:28

Phases of Wound Repair

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Following injury, the integrity of the injured tissues must be reestablished. For example, in skin tissue, wound repair involves coordination among resident skin cells, blood mononuclear cells, extracellular matrix, growth factors, and cytokines to complete the healing cascade.
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Epidermal stem cells (EpiSCs) are mainly located at the basal layer of the epidermis. These cells repair minor injuries of the skin and replace dead skin cells. However, EpiSCs’ cannot heal severe wounds such as major burns or those from diabetes or hereditary disorders. In such cases, culturing the epidermal stem cells from the patient is possible and has yielded successful treatment options, such as laboratory-grown skin grafts. These grafts are synthesized using a patient’s own...
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Overview of Regeneration and Repair01:19

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Regeneration and repair processes are critical in healing damages caused by injury, disease, and aging. In regeneration, the damaged tissue is entirely replaced with new growth that restores the original architecture and function. In contrast, tissue repair usually results in a fixed tissue architecture involving scar formation. Scars generally do not reestablish tissue function and may also exhibit structural abnormalities at the injury site.
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Related Experiment Video

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Visualizing Scar Development Using SCAD Assay - An Ex-situ Skin Scarring Assay
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Visualizing Scar Development Using SCAD Assay - An Ex-situ Skin Scarring Assay

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Scarring Head Wound

Sophie Gart1, Alfredo Siller1, Corey Georgesen1

  • 1University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha. Sophie Gart is from the College of Medicine, and Drs. Siller and Georgesen are from the Department of Dermatology.

Cutis
|September 19, 2024
PubMed
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No abstract available in PubMed .

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