Fetal Wound Healing


Book Description

The ability of foetal tissue to heal without scarring is now well documented, but the potentially far-reaching implications of this process for the practice of surgery and the management of healing are just beginning to be understood. This book provides up-to-date information on the subject.




Textbook on Scar Management


Book Description

This text book is open access under a CC BY 4.0 license. Written by a group of international experts in the field and the result of over ten years of collaboration, it allows students and readers to gain to gain a detailed understanding of scar and wound treatment – a topic still dispersed among various disciplines. The content is divided into three parts for easy reference. The first part focuses on the fundamentals of scar management, including assessment and evaluation procedures, classification, tools for accurate measurement of all scar-related elements (volume density, color, vascularization), descriptions of the different evaluation scales. It also features chapters on the best practices in electronic-file storage for clinical reevaluation and telemedicine procedures for safe remote evaluation. The second section offers a comprehensive review of treatment and evidence-based technologies, presenting a consensus of the various available guidelines (silicone, surgery, chemical injections, mechanical tools for scar stabilization, lasers). The third part evaluates the full range of emerging technologies offered to physicians as alternative or complementary solutions for wound healing (mechanical, chemical, anti-proliferation). Textbook on Scar Management will appeal to trainees, fellows, residents and physicians dealing with scar management in plastic surgery, dermatology, surgery and oncology, as well as to nurses and general practitioners




Molecular Mechanisms of Embryonic Wound Healing


Book Description

Embryos have a striking ability to heal wounds rapidly and without scarring. Embryonic wound repair is a conserved process, driven by polarization of cell-cell junctions and the actomyosin cytoskeleton in the cells around the wound to coordinate cell movements. However, the mechanisms of junctional and cytoskeletal polarization during embryonic wound repair are unclear. To investigate the upstream signals that mediate cell polarization around wounds, I used quantitative in vivo microscopy in Drosophila embryos to show that the endocytic machinery localizes to the wound margin, in a process dependent on calcium and actomyosin contractility. Blocking endocytosis with pharmacological or genetic approaches disrupted wound repair, E- cadherin trafficking, and actomyosin polarization. E-cadherin overexpression also resulted in reduced actin accumulation around wounds and slower wound closure. Reducing E-cadherin levels in embryos in which endocytosis was blocked rescued actin localization to the wound margin. Together, these results demonstrate a central role for endocytosis in wound healing and indicate that polarized E-cadherin endocytosis is necessary for actomyosin remodeling during embryonic wound repair. I next identified reactive oxygen species (ROS) as a critical signal that promotes polarized junctional rearrangements around wounds in Drosophila and zebrafish embryos. Blocking ROS production significantly inhibited wound healing, and severely impaired junctional trafficking and actomyosin accumulation around the wound. ROS can post-translationally modify proteins by oxidizing electron-rich cysteine residues. The Drosophila ortholog of Src kinase, Src42A, contains several putative redox-sensitive cysteines, and has been implicated in E-cadherin trafficking during morphogenesis. I found that embryos mutant for Src42A[C471], a conserved cysteine that is oxidized in zebrafish leukocytes upon wounding, displayed impaired wound healing and myosin polarization, indicating that oxidation of Src42A[C471] is required for efficient tissue repair. Together, my results detail mechanisms by which polarization of junctions and the cytoskeleton are regulated during the coordinated cell movements that drive wound healing in vivo.




Skin Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine


Book Description

The skin is the largest human organ system. Loss of skin integrity due to injury or illness results in a substantial physiologic imbalance and ultimately in severe disability or death. From burn victims to surgical scars and plastic surgery, the therapies resulting from skin tissue engineering and regenerative medicine are important to a broad spectrum of patients. Skin Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine provides a translational link for biomedical researchers across fields to understand the inter-disciplinary approaches which expanded available therapies for patients and additional research collaboration. This work expands on the primary literature on the state of the art of cell therapies and biomaterials to review the most widely used surgical therapies for the specific clinical scenarios. Explores cellular and molecular processes of wound healing, scar formation, and dermal repair Includes examples of animal models for wound healing and translation to the clinical world Presents the current state of, and clinical opportunities for, extracellular matrices, natural biomaterials, synthetic biomaterials, biologic skin substitutes, and adult and fetal stem and skin cells for skin regenerative therapies and wound management Discusses new innovative approaches for wound healing including skin bioprinting and directed cellular therapies




Indwelling Neural Implants


Book Description

Despite enormous advances made in the development of external effector prosthetics over the last quarter century, significant questions remain, especially those concerning signal degradation that occurs with chronically implanted neuroelectrodes. Offering contributions from pioneering researchers in neuroprosthetics and tissue repair, Indwel




Cutaneous Wound Healing


Book Description

Gene therapy, bioengineered skin, and other methods in advanced biology are revolutionizing the treatment of wounds. Written by experts in research and clinical practice, Cutaneous Wound Healing examines the current knowledge and emerging treatment methods. This volume explains the normal molecular and cellular functions that occur when a wound heals, as well as dysfunctional events, such as a chronic wound or an ulcer. Such dysfunctions signal an imbalance in the body, explained here along with possible treatments. The book's mini-atlas is an indispensable reference tool. Dermatologists, plastic surgeons, and general practitioners can benefit from this text.




Neural Crest Stem Cells


Book Description

Offers readers an understanding of the development of neural crest cells, which is crucial as many birth defects and tumours are of neural crest origin. Delving into stem cells from different locations of the body, this book explores the best possible source of such cells for the use in medical applications.




The Resolution of Inflammation


Book Description

This book provides readers with an up-to-date and comprehensive view on the resolution of inflammation and on new developments in this area, including pro-resolution mediators, apoptosis, macrophage clearance of apoptotic cells, possible novel drug developments.