Skin — The Ultimate Solution for the Burn Wound
- 16 August 1984
- journal article
- Published by Massachusetts Medical Society in New England Journal of Medicine
- Vol. 311 (7) , 466-467
- https://doi.org/10.1056/nejm198408163110711
Abstract
When the history of 20th-century burn care is written, topical antibacterial agents are unlikely to receive the credit for contributing to progress in burn care that they have been awarded during the past two decades. Modern-day burn salves are probably no different in principle from the oils, foodstuffs, and escharotic agents that were applied throughout the 19th century; they hide the problem and delay the surgeon's primary task — skin replacement. The deficit in any full-thickness burn injury is skin, and that problem cannot be addressed by obscuring the wound with even the most pharmacologically refined lather.The widespread clinical . . .Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Permanent Coverage of Large Burn Wounds with Autologous Cultured Human EpitheliumNew England Journal of Medicine, 1984
- Successful Use of a Physiologically Acceptable Artificial Skin in the Treatment of Extensive Burn InjuryAnnals of Surgery, 1981
- GRAFTING OF BURNS WITH CULTURED EPITHELIUM PREPARED FROM AUTOLOGOUS EPIDERMAL CELLSPublished by Elsevier ,1981
- FORMATION OF EPIDERMIS BY SERIALLY CULTIVATED HUMAN EPIDERMAL CELLS TRANSPLANTED AS AN EPITHELIUM TO ATHYMIC MICETransplantation, 1980
- Growth of cultured human epidermal cells into multiple epithelia suitable for grafting.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1979
- Contractile Fibroblasts in Chronic Alcoholic CirrhosisGastroenterology, 1979
- PROLONGED SURVIVAL OF HUMAN SKIN ALLOGRAFTS FOLLOWING THERMAL INJURYTransplantation, 1978
- Temporary Skin Transplantation and Immunosuppression for Extensive BurnsNew England Journal of Medicine, 1974
- THE CONTRACTILE FIBROBLASTPlastic and Reconstructive Surgery, 1973