毁容
疤痕
伤口愈合
医学
再生(生物学)
干细胞
祖细胞
外科
重症监护医学
生物
遗传学
细胞生物学
作者
Graham G. Walmsley,Zeshaan N. Maan,Victor W. Wong,Dominik Duscher,Michael S. Hu,Elizabeth R. Zielins,Taylor Wearda,Ethan G. Muhonen,Adrian McArdle,Ruth Tevlin,David Atashroo,Kshemendra Senarath-Yapa,H. Peter Lorenz,Geoffrey C. Gurtner,Michael T. Longaker
标识
DOI:10.1097/prs.0000000000000972
摘要
Over 100 million patients acquire scars in the industrialized world each year, primarily as a result of elective operations. Although undefined, the global incidence of scarring is even larger, extending to significant numbers of burn and other trauma-related wounds. Scars have the potential to exert a profound psychological and physical impact on the individual. Beyond aesthetic considerations and potential disfigurement, scarring can result in restriction of movement and reduced quality of life. The formation of a scar following skin injury is a consequence of wound healing occurring through reparative rather than regenerative mechanisms. In this article, the authors review the basic stages of wound healing; differences between adult and fetal wound healing; various mechanical, genetic, and pharmacologic strategies to reduce scarring; and the biology of skin stem/progenitor cells that may hold the key to scarless regeneration.
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