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      Wound dressings: Current advances and future directions

      1 , 1 , 1 , 1 , 2 , 3 , 3
      Journal of Applied Polymer Science
      Wiley

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          Wound repair and regeneration.

          The repair of wounds is one of the most complex biological processes that occur during human life. After an injury, multiple biological pathways immediately become activated and are synchronized to respond. In human adults, the wound repair process commonly leads to a non-functioning mass of fibrotic tissue known as a scar. By contrast, early in gestation, injured fetal tissues can be completely recreated, without fibrosis, in a process resembling regeneration. Some organisms, however, retain the ability to regenerate tissue throughout adult life. Knowledge gained from studying such organisms might help to unlock latent regenerative pathways in humans, which would change medical practice as much as the introduction of antibiotics did in the twentieth century.
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            Inflammation in wound repair: molecular and cellular mechanisms.

            In post-natal life the inflammatory response is an inevitable consequence of tissue injury. Experimental studies established the dogma that inflammation is essential to the establishment of cutaneous homeostasis following injury, and in recent years information about specific subsets of inflammatory cell lineages and the cytokine network orchestrating inflammation associated with tissue repair has increased. Recently, this dogma has been challenged, and reports have raised questions on the validity of the essential prerequisite of inflammation for efficient tissue repair. Indeed, in experimental models of repair, inflammation has been shown to delay healing and to result in increased scarring. Furthermore, chronic inflammation, a hallmark of the non-healing wound, predisposes tissue to cancer development. Thus, a more detailed understanding in mechanisms controlling the inflammatory response during repair and how inflammation directs the outcome of the healing process will serve as a significant milestone in the therapy of pathological tissue repair. In this paper, we review cellular and molecular mechanisms controlling inflammation in cutaneous tissue repair and provide a rationale for targeting the inflammatory phase in order to modulate the outcome of the healing response.
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              Cutaneous wound healing.

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                (View ORCID Profile)
                Journal
                Journal of Applied Polymer Science
                J Appl Polym Sci
                Wiley
                0021-8995
                1097-4628
                April 05 2019
                July 15 2019
                March 18 2019
                July 15 2019
                : 136
                : 27
                : 47738
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Chemical EngineeringIsfahan University of Technology Isfahan 8415683111 Iran
                [2 ]Division of Materials ScienceLuleå University of Technology Luleå SE‐97187 Sweden
                [3 ]Center for Nanofibers and Nanotechnology, Department of Mechanical EngineeringFaculty of Engineering Singapore 117576 Singapore
                Article
                10.1002/app.47738
                36080323
                5e33d127-4142-4a7d-b42e-1e2c1f631b08
                © 2019

                http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/termsAndConditions#vor

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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