Rapid Alignment of Collagen Fibers in the Dermis of Undermined and Not Undermined Skin Stretched with a Skin-Stretching Device
- 1 February 2002
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery
- Vol. 109 (2) , 674-680
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00006534-200202000-00038
Abstract
A controlled, quantitative histochemical study was performed in five piglets to establish changes in undermined and not undermined stretched skin. The skin was stretched with a stretching device for 30 minutes to close a large skin defect. On each flank of the piglet, at a standard position, 9 × 9-cm wounds were created under general anesthesia. On one flank, the surrounding skin was undermined cranially and caudally over a 10-centimeter area. Sections of skin biopsies obtained during stretching were stained with picrosirius red and studied with routine light microscopy and polarized light microscopy in combination with image analysis. The length of collagen fibers was analyzed as a parameter of changes in the dermis resulting from skin stretching. This newly developed quantitative method appeared to be valid, specific, and reproducible, allowing for objective determination of changes in the length of the fibers in the plain of the sections. Changes in the orientation of collagen fibers in the dermis as a result of skin stretching were thereby determined. Epidermal thickness did not change significantly under the influence of stretching forces in both undermined and not undermined skin. However, the orientation of the collagen fibers changed significantly as a result of skin stretching. In undermined wounds, parallel alignment and elongation of the fibers in the plane of the sections was already observed after 15 minutes of stretching. The fibers became aligned in the direction of the stretching force, perpendicular to the wound margin. After 30 minutes of stretching, the mean major axes of the collagen fibers were longest in the plane of the sections (p < 0.001). This meant that elongation and parallel alignment of the collagen fibers had occurred. Stretching of not undermined skin for 15 minutes resulted in significantly stronger parallel alignment in the plane of the sections as compared with undermined skin. This was less well defined after 30 minutes of stretching in not undermined skin. It is concluded that skin stretching with a skin-stretching device for 30 minutes results in significant histomorphological changes of collagen fibers in the dermis of both undermined and not undermined skin. The fibers realign rapidly as a result of stretching forces and become aligned in the direction of the stretching force, perpendicular to the wound margin. These dynamic changes in collagen fibers explain the significantly decreased wound closing tension resulting from skin stretching and explain how skin stretches beyond its inherent extensibility. (Plast. Reconstr. Surg. 109: 674, 2002.)Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- PRIMARY SKIN CLOSURE OF A LARGE GROIN DEFECT AFTER INGUINAL LYMPHADENECTOMY FOR PENILE CANCER USING A SKIN STRETCHING DEVICEJournal of Urology, 1998
- Histology and Physiology of Tissue ExpansionThe Journal of Dermatologic Surgery and Oncology, 1993
- Histomorphologic Changes in Expanded Skeletal Muscle in RatsPlastic and Reconstructive Surgery, 1993
- A Skin-Stretching Device for the Harnessing of the Viscoelastic Properties of SkinPlastic and Reconstructive Surgery, 1993
- Continuous versus Intraoperative Expansion in the Pig ModelPlastic and Reconstructive Surgery, 1992
- Biomechanical and histomorphological changes in expanded rabbit skinBritish Journal of Plastic Surgery, 1990
- Histomorphologic Evaluation of Guinea Pig Skin and Soft Tissue after Controlled Tissue ExpansionPlastic and Reconstructive Surgery, 1982
- Electron Microscopic Evaluation of Guinea Pig Skin and Soft Tissues “Expanded” with a Self-Inflating Silicone ImplantPlastic and Reconstructive Surgery, 1982
- Directional variations in the extensibility of human skinBritish Journal of Plastic Surgery, 1977
- The mobile micro-architecture of dermal collagen: A bio-engineering studyBritish Journal of Surgery, 1965