Concepedia

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Development and Use of a Living Skin Equivalent

227

Citations

0

References

1981

Year

Abstract

We have developed a living skin equivalent, which serves as a skin substitute in experimental animals. On application it is rapidly vascularized, it inhibits wound contraction, and it is immunologically tolerated and persists for as long as it is allowed to remain in place. It comes to resemble normal skin, although it lacks secondary derivatives, the cells for which may in time be available for incorporation into the fabricated tissue.