Abstract The skin is the largest organ of the body, which meets the environment most directly. Thus, the skin is vulnerable to various damages, particularly burn injury. Skin wound healing is a serious interaction between cell types, cytokines, mediators, the neurovascular system, and matrix remodeling. Tissue regeneration technology remarkably enhances skin repair via re-epidermalization, epidermal-stromal cell interactions, angiogenesis, and inhabitation of hypertrophic scars and keloids. The success rates of skin healing for burn injuries have significantly increased with the use of various skin substitutes. In this review, we discuss skin replacement with cells, growth factors, scaffolds, or cell-seeded scaffolds for skin tissue reconst...
Full thickness wounds, such as deep burns, need restoration of both the dermal and epidermal layers ...
Skin regeneration represents a promising line of management for patients with skin loss, including b...
Wound healing is the inherent ability of an organism to protect itself against injuries. Cumulative ...
Burns are caused by several mechanisms including flame, scald, chemical, electrical, and ionizing an...
Context Burn wounds of the skin require a long period to healing, which very often is inco...
The treatment of full thickness skin loss, which can be extensive in the case of large burns, contin...
Nowadays, most patients with severe burns will survive their injury. This evolution is accompanied b...
Burns are among the most life-threatening physical injuries, in which fast wound closure is crucial....
Abstract Cell therapy has emerged as an important component of life-saving procedures in treating bu...
Significance: Cutaneouswound regeneration is vital to keep skin functions and for large wounds, to m...
Skin protects the body from exogenous substances and functions as a barrier to fluid loss and trauma...
Medical science has vastly improved on the means and methods available for the treatment of wounds i...
Abstract ᅟ Engineering of biologic skin substitutes has progressed over time from individual applica...
International audienceMany wound management protocols have been developed to improve wound healing a...
Background: Treatment of burned patients is a tricky clinical problem not only because of the extent...
Full thickness wounds, such as deep burns, need restoration of both the dermal and epidermal layers ...
Skin regeneration represents a promising line of management for patients with skin loss, including b...
Wound healing is the inherent ability of an organism to protect itself against injuries. Cumulative ...
Burns are caused by several mechanisms including flame, scald, chemical, electrical, and ionizing an...
Context Burn wounds of the skin require a long period to healing, which very often is inco...
The treatment of full thickness skin loss, which can be extensive in the case of large burns, contin...
Nowadays, most patients with severe burns will survive their injury. This evolution is accompanied b...
Burns are among the most life-threatening physical injuries, in which fast wound closure is crucial....
Abstract Cell therapy has emerged as an important component of life-saving procedures in treating bu...
Significance: Cutaneouswound regeneration is vital to keep skin functions and for large wounds, to m...
Skin protects the body from exogenous substances and functions as a barrier to fluid loss and trauma...
Medical science has vastly improved on the means and methods available for the treatment of wounds i...
Abstract ᅟ Engineering of biologic skin substitutes has progressed over time from individual applica...
International audienceMany wound management protocols have been developed to improve wound healing a...
Background: Treatment of burned patients is a tricky clinical problem not only because of the extent...
Full thickness wounds, such as deep burns, need restoration of both the dermal and epidermal layers ...
Skin regeneration represents a promising line of management for patients with skin loss, including b...
Wound healing is the inherent ability of an organism to protect itself against injuries. Cumulative ...