For patients with extensive burns or donor site scarring, the limited availability of autologous and the inevitable rejection of allogeneic skin drive the need for new alternatives. Existing engineered biologic and synthetic skin analogs serve as temporary coverage until sufficient autologous skin is available. Here we report successful engraftment of a self-assembled bilayered skin construct derived from autologous skin punch biopsies in a porcine model. Dermal fibroblasts were stimulated to produce an extracellular matrix and were then seeded with epidermal progenitor cells to generate an epidermis. Autologous constructs were grafted onto partial- and full-thickness wounds. By gross examination and histology, skin construct vascularizatio...
There is a clinical need for skin substitutes to replace full-thickness skin loss. Our group has dev...
The progress in tissue engineering has lead to the development of tri-dimensional tissues that can b...
Tissue-engineered skin equivalents mimic key aspects of the human skin, and can thus be employed as ...
There is a high incidence of failure and recurrence for chronic skin wounds following conventional t...
Background: Extended full thickness skin defects still represent a considerable therapeutic challeng...
As time to final coverage is the essence for better survival outcome in severely burned patients, we...
Treatment of chronic skin wound such as diabetic ulcers, burns, pressure wounds are challenging prob...
For patients with extensive burns, wound coverage with an autologous in vitro reconstructed skin mad...
Tissue engineering has created several original and new avenues of investigation in biology (Auger e...
Tissue engineering plays an important role in the production of skin equivalents for the therapy of ...
Tissue engineering plays an important role in the production of skin equivalents for the therapy of ...
Definitive treatment to achieve wound healing in major burns frequently include skin transplantation...
Tissue engineering plays an important role in the production of skin equivalents for the therapy of ...
Since the culture of keratinocytes on feeder layers, research to produce skin equivalents has been ...
Background. The best alternative to a split-thickness graft for the wound coverage of patients with ...
There is a clinical need for skin substitutes to replace full-thickness skin loss. Our group has dev...
The progress in tissue engineering has lead to the development of tri-dimensional tissues that can b...
Tissue-engineered skin equivalents mimic key aspects of the human skin, and can thus be employed as ...
There is a high incidence of failure and recurrence for chronic skin wounds following conventional t...
Background: Extended full thickness skin defects still represent a considerable therapeutic challeng...
As time to final coverage is the essence for better survival outcome in severely burned patients, we...
Treatment of chronic skin wound such as diabetic ulcers, burns, pressure wounds are challenging prob...
For patients with extensive burns, wound coverage with an autologous in vitro reconstructed skin mad...
Tissue engineering has created several original and new avenues of investigation in biology (Auger e...
Tissue engineering plays an important role in the production of skin equivalents for the therapy of ...
Tissue engineering plays an important role in the production of skin equivalents for the therapy of ...
Definitive treatment to achieve wound healing in major burns frequently include skin transplantation...
Tissue engineering plays an important role in the production of skin equivalents for the therapy of ...
Since the culture of keratinocytes on feeder layers, research to produce skin equivalents has been ...
Background. The best alternative to a split-thickness graft for the wound coverage of patients with ...
There is a clinical need for skin substitutes to replace full-thickness skin loss. Our group has dev...
The progress in tissue engineering has lead to the development of tri-dimensional tissues that can b...
Tissue-engineered skin equivalents mimic key aspects of the human skin, and can thus be employed as ...