Evaluation of a composite skin substitute to treat venous stasis ulcers: a pilot study

Autores/as

  • Paula Dadalti-Granja Hospital Aristacho Pessoa, Corpo de Bombeiro Militar do Estado do Rio de Janeiro- Rio de Janeiro/RJ – Brasil.
  • Marco Aurélio Leiros Hospital de Força Aérea do Galeão, Rio de Janeiro- Rio de Janeiro/RJ – Brasil.
  • Bernardo M O Pascalleri Embriology and Histology Department, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro- Rio de Janeiro/RJ – Brasil.
  • Christina Maeda Takyia Embriology and Histology Department, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro- Rio de Janeiro/RJ – Brasil.
  • Radovan Borojevic Embriology and Histology Department, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro- Rio de Janeiro/RJ – Brasil.
  • Renata Brum Martucci Cell Bank, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro- Rio de Janeiro/RJ – Brasil.
  • Talita Franco Sector of Plastic Surgery, HUCFF-UFRJ and School of Medicine, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro- Rio de Janeiro/RJ – Brasil.
  • Marcia Ramos-e-Silva Sector of Dermatology, HUCFF-UFRJ and School of Medicine, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro- Rio de Janeiro/RJ – Brasil.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.53855/bjt.v9i2.363

Palabras clave:

Varicose Ulcer, Extracellular Matrix, Skin, Artificial, Tissue Culture Techniques, Cell Culture Techniques

Resumen

Introduction: Venous leg ulcers represent a therapeutic challenge, and they are associated to significant morbidity and cost. Many advances have been made to develop and apply biological skin substitutes, showing they can be beneficial for patients with burns, leg ulcers, and other skin lesions. Autologous cultivated keratinocytes have been demonstrated to be useful in leg ulcer treatment, but the lack of a dermal component may compromise their effects and the quality of the scar. Purpose: To evaluate a composite skin graft of human acellular dermis and autologous keratinocyte culture to treat leg ulcer. Methods: Two patients with four long-term chronic ulcers were treated with a composite skin graft of human acellular dermis and autologous keratinocyte culture for a month in this pilot study. Results: The four ulcers had a surface reduction of 72.21%, 36.36%, 60.93%, and 15.90% after one month of treatment. No adverse tissue reactions were observed. Histology and immunohistochemistry showed that humam acellular dermis was free of donor’s cells, and the composite skin substitute preserved the architecture of the normal skin, including the basement membrane components and stratified epidermis. Conclusions: These preliminary observations suggest that such composite skin substitute could be an alternative to recalcitrant leg ulcers.

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Publicado

2006-03-01

Cómo citar

Dadalti-Granja, P., Leiros, M. A., Pascalleri, B. M. O., Takyia, C. M., Borojevic, R., Martucci, R. B., Franco, T., & Ramos-e-Silva, M. (2006). Evaluation of a composite skin substitute to treat venous stasis ulcers: a pilot study. Brazilian Journal of Transplantation, 9(2), 540–543. https://doi.org/10.53855/bjt.v9i2.363

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