Deceased donor skin possesses many of the properties of the ideal biological dressing, and a well-stocked skin bank has become a critically important asset for the modern burn surgeon. Without it, managing patients with extensive burns and wounds becomes far more challenging, and outcomes are significantly worse. With the recent establishment of such a bank in South Africa, the challenge facing the medical fraternity is to facilitate tissue donation so that allograft skin supply can match the enormous demand
Background: Skin grafts are therapeutic alternatives to treat second and third-degree skin burns. Sk...
Early tangential excision of nonviable burn tissue, followed by immediate skin grafting with autogra...
Objectives: Since its creation the first dermatome of 1939 skin grafts have become the most common ...
Deceased donor skin possesses many of the properties of the ideal biological dressing, and a well-st...
Scarectomy and prompt coverage are some of the main cornerstones of the actual treatment of major bu...
Background: Treatment of burned patients is a tricky clinical problem not only because of the extent...
This article highlights the need for skin donations to treat burn wounds. South Africa has an except...
The most challenging problem in care of patients with large area body surface burns is the lack of v...
Background: The management of patients with massive burns remains a challenge. Early burn wound exci...
Background: In the absence of xenograft and biosynthetic skin substitutes, deceased donor skin allog...
In South Africa and around the world, the rates of severe burns are a significant health issue. Skin...
Preserved allogeneic donor skin still represents one of the gold standard therapies in temporary wou...
Major burns still continue to pose problems of inadequate auto skin closure. Patients suffering seve...
Significance: Cutaneous wound regeneration is vital to keep skin functions and for large wounds, to ...
Background:. In Nepal, burn trauma causes more than 55,000 injuries each year. Burn-related mortalit...
Background: Skin grafts are therapeutic alternatives to treat second and third-degree skin burns. Sk...
Early tangential excision of nonviable burn tissue, followed by immediate skin grafting with autogra...
Objectives: Since its creation the first dermatome of 1939 skin grafts have become the most common ...
Deceased donor skin possesses many of the properties of the ideal biological dressing, and a well-st...
Scarectomy and prompt coverage are some of the main cornerstones of the actual treatment of major bu...
Background: Treatment of burned patients is a tricky clinical problem not only because of the extent...
This article highlights the need for skin donations to treat burn wounds. South Africa has an except...
The most challenging problem in care of patients with large area body surface burns is the lack of v...
Background: The management of patients with massive burns remains a challenge. Early burn wound exci...
Background: In the absence of xenograft and biosynthetic skin substitutes, deceased donor skin allog...
In South Africa and around the world, the rates of severe burns are a significant health issue. Skin...
Preserved allogeneic donor skin still represents one of the gold standard therapies in temporary wou...
Major burns still continue to pose problems of inadequate auto skin closure. Patients suffering seve...
Significance: Cutaneous wound regeneration is vital to keep skin functions and for large wounds, to ...
Background:. In Nepal, burn trauma causes more than 55,000 injuries each year. Burn-related mortalit...
Background: Skin grafts are therapeutic alternatives to treat second and third-degree skin burns. Sk...
Early tangential excision of nonviable burn tissue, followed by immediate skin grafting with autogra...
Objectives: Since its creation the first dermatome of 1939 skin grafts have become the most common ...