Collagen tubules filled with BDNF-enriched collagen gel appear to be at least as good as autologous nerve grafts for bridging short facial nerve gaps. Larger experimental studies are warranted to determine if clinical trials are justified.
Autologous dermal fibroblasts after propagation in cell culture were used for face soft tissue augmentation. Twenty patients aged 37-61 years with facial rhytides and atrophic scars were treated with autologous fibroblasts from cell culture. Significant sustained clinical improvement was observed. Cells of early passages (4, 5, 6) were used for injection. The study showed that cultured fibroblasts were functionally active and produced large quantities of type I collagen. In vitro studies of scar formation potency of injectable fibroblasts showed that these cells possessed normal collagen gel contraction capacity. In vivo experiments showed that cultured fibroblasts exhibited no oncogenic properties and induced no tumors in nude mice.
The purpose of this study was to analyze the effect of retinoic acid on wound healing and depth of injury in an animal skin model resurfaced with a CO2 laser. The dorsal skin of 21 Hartley guinea pigs was divided into halves. One-half received a daily application of 0.05% retinoic acid for 28 days, whereas the other half served as the control. The animals were divided into three treatment groups of seven animals. Group A was laser resurfaced with one pass of the Coherent UltraPulse CO2 laser (300 mJ, 60 W, density 40 percent). Group B received two passes, and group C received three passes. Histologic studies were obtained before laser resurfacing and days 1, 4, and 7 after resurfacing. Depth of injury, thickness, number of squamous cell and granular cell layers, and epithelialization rates were measured. We found that the depth of injury was statistically less in animals pretreated with retinoic acid. Granular cells were thicker and more numerous at day 4 in pretreated animals but similar to controls by day 7. Animals pre-treated with retinoic acid overall seemed to heal wounds earlier. In conclusion, pretreatment with retinoic acid may reduce the depth of injury in laser resurfacing and speed healing rates.
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