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A Hyaluronic Acid Membrane Delivery System for Cultured Keratinocytes: Clinical ???Take??? Rates in the Porcine Kerato-Dermal Model
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1997
Year
Regenerative MedicineTissue EngineeringClinical Take RatesEngineeringTissue TransplantationCulture DishesSkin SubstituteDermal StructureCultured KeratinocytesSurgeryWound HealingBiomedical EngineeringDermatologyPorcine Kerato-dermal ModelTake RatesMedicineSoft Tissue ReconstructionPlastic Surgery
The clinical take rates of cultured keratinocyte autografts are poor on a full-thickness wound unless a dermal bed is provided. Even under these circumstances two important problems are the time delay in growing autografts and the fragility of the grafts. A laser-perforated hyaluronic acid membrane delivery system allows grafting at early confluence without requiring dispase digestion to release grafts from their culture dishes. We designed this study to investigate the influence of this membrane on clinical take rates in an established porcine kerato-dermal grafting model. The study demonstrated a significant reduction in take as a result of halving the keratinocyte seeding density onto the membrane. The take rates, however, of grafts grown on the membrane at half or full conventional seeding density and transplanted to a dermal wound bed were comparable, if not better, than those of keratinocyte sheet grafts.