Fibroproliferative scars are an important clinical problem, and yet the mechanisms that regulate scar formation remain poorly understood. This study explored the hypothesis that the epithelium has a critical role in dictating scar formation, and that these interactions differ in skin and mucosa. Paired skin and vaginal mucosal wounds on New Zealand white (NZW) rabbits diverged significantly; the cutaneous epithelium exhibited a greater and prolonged response to injury when compared with the mucosa. Microarray analysis of the injured epithelium was performed, and numerous factors were identified that were more strongly upregulated in skin, including several proinflammatory cytokines and profibrotic growth factors. Analysis of the underlying ...
In human skin, large burned surfaces heal using two concomitant phenomena: re-epithelialization and ...
When cutaneous injury involves disruption of the basement membrane, keratinocytes must disassemble t...
Chronic wounds are a major source of morbidity in the United States, affecting an estimated 5.7 mill...
Fibroproliferative scars are an important clinical problem, and yet the mechanisms that regulate sca...
Mucosal wounds heal more rapidly, exhibit less inflammation, and are associated with minimal scarrin...
The skin epidermis forms mainly by the stratification or differentiation of keratinocytes which divi...
In post-natal life the inflammatory response is an inevitable consequence of tissue injury. Experime...
Damage to the skin initiates a cascade of well-orchestrated events that ultimately leads to repair o...
The alteration of normal dermal fibroblast function that leads to the development of hypertrophic sc...
Hypertrophic scars (HTS) and keloids are challenging problems. Their pathogenesis results from an ov...
During cutaneous tissue organization, numerous critical interactions occur between cells and the ext...
Factors regulating the attachment and directional migration of a regenerating epidermis in wound hea...
The roles of polypeptide growth factors in promoting wound healing and in directing the specificity ...
Keloids and hypertrophic scars are pathological cutaneous scars. They arise from excessive wound hea...
We examined the importance of injury for the epidermal innate immune response in human skin wounds. ...
In human skin, large burned surfaces heal using two concomitant phenomena: re-epithelialization and ...
When cutaneous injury involves disruption of the basement membrane, keratinocytes must disassemble t...
Chronic wounds are a major source of morbidity in the United States, affecting an estimated 5.7 mill...
Fibroproliferative scars are an important clinical problem, and yet the mechanisms that regulate sca...
Mucosal wounds heal more rapidly, exhibit less inflammation, and are associated with minimal scarrin...
The skin epidermis forms mainly by the stratification or differentiation of keratinocytes which divi...
In post-natal life the inflammatory response is an inevitable consequence of tissue injury. Experime...
Damage to the skin initiates a cascade of well-orchestrated events that ultimately leads to repair o...
The alteration of normal dermal fibroblast function that leads to the development of hypertrophic sc...
Hypertrophic scars (HTS) and keloids are challenging problems. Their pathogenesis results from an ov...
During cutaneous tissue organization, numerous critical interactions occur between cells and the ext...
Factors regulating the attachment and directional migration of a regenerating epidermis in wound hea...
The roles of polypeptide growth factors in promoting wound healing and in directing the specificity ...
Keloids and hypertrophic scars are pathological cutaneous scars. They arise from excessive wound hea...
We examined the importance of injury for the epidermal innate immune response in human skin wounds. ...
In human skin, large burned surfaces heal using two concomitant phenomena: re-epithelialization and ...
When cutaneous injury involves disruption of the basement membrane, keratinocytes must disassemble t...
Chronic wounds are a major source of morbidity in the United States, affecting an estimated 5.7 mill...