It was shown in 1919 that peritoneal healing differs from that of skin. When a defect is made in the parietal peritoneum the entire surface becomes epithelialized simultaneously and not gradually from the borders as in epidermalization of skin wounds. While multiplication and migration of mesothelial cells from the margin of the wound may play a small part in the regenerative process, it cannot play a major role, since new mesothelium develops in the centre of a large wound at the same time as it develops in the centre of a smaller one. Development of intraperitoneal adhesions is a dynamic process whereby surgically traumatized tissues in apposition bind through fibrin bridges which become organized by wound repair cells, often supporting a rich vascular supply as well as neuronal elements.
CD38-cells, and lymphocytes, but not mature myeloid cells. Similarly, mRNA for the AT1a receptor was expressed on human stromal cell clones, offering further support to the hypothesis that AII acts partially through the mesenchymal compartment of the bone marrow. These data suggest that AII may be a factor which stimulates the proliferation of hematopoietic progenitors.
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