| Literature DB >> 11227683 |
F A Navarro1, M L Stoner, H B Lee, C S Park, F M Wood, D P Orgill.
Abstract
Melanocyte restoration is critical in reconstituting skin color. We developed a spotted (piebald) pig wound model to study methods of restoring melanocytes to the epidermis. Paired, full-thickness, porcine wounds were covered with nonpigmented, fully expanded, 3:1 meshed, split-thickness skin grafts and were sprayed with an epidermal cell suspension. The suspensions were highly pigmented skin (HPS) cell isolates for half of the wounds (n = 16) and nonpigmented skin (NPS) cell isolates for the remaining wounds (n = 16). Histologic sections showed 6.0 +/- 3.0 and 15 +/- 4.0 pigmented melanocytes per high-power field on days 8 and 20 in HPS-treated wounds and no pigmented melanocytes in NPS-treated wounds. Melanin pigment was dispersed in all layers of the epithelium for the HPS group on day 20 compared with a lack of melanin pigment observed in the NPS group. Cell spraying may provide a clinical method to restore color to skin; further work is needed to control the expression of melanin.Entities:
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Year: 2001 PMID: 11227683 DOI: 10.1097/00004630-200101000-00009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Burn Care Rehabil ISSN: 0273-8481