Publication | Open Access
Fibromodulin reduces scar size and increases scar tensile strength in normal and excessive‐mechanical‐loading porcine cutaneous wounds
30
Citations
11
References
2018
Year
Scar ManagementTissue EngineeringEngineeringWound AssessmentBiomedical EngineeringDermatologyOrthopaedic SurgerySkin RegenerationRegenerative MedicineSoft Tissue InjuryHypertrophic ScarringScar Tensile StrengthWound CareMatrix BiologyScar SizeTissue InjuryMechanobiologyFibrosisPorcine Cutaneous WoundsPig SkinScar PreventionFunctional Tissue EngineeringBurn Scar PreventionWound HealingHuman SkinMedicineExtracellular Matrix
Hypertrophic scarring is a major postoperative complication which leads to severe disfigurement and dysfunction in patients and usually requires multiple surgical revisions due to its high recurrence rates. Excessive-mechanical-loading across wounds is an important initiator of hypertrophic scarring formation. In this study, we demonstrate that intradermal administration of a single extracellular matrix (ECM) molecule-fibromodulin (FMOD) protein-can significantly reduce scar size, increase tensile strength, and improve dermal collagen architecture organization in the normal and even excessive-mechanical-loading red Duroc pig wound models. Since pig skin is recognized by the Food and Drug Administration as the closest animal equivalent to human skin, and because red Duroc pigs show scarring that closely resembles human proliferative scarring and hypertrophic scarring, FMOD-based technologies hold high translational potential and applicability to human patients suffering from scarring-especially hypertrophic scarring.
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