Abstract

This study was designed to evaluate biomechanically defined wound healing in full-thickness skin explants in tissue culture. The requirement for preculture incubation of wounds in situ was characterized. Full-thickness skin incisions were made in 44 rats and closed immediately. Wounds were incubated in situ for 0, 12, 24, 36, 48, 72, or 96 hours before harvesting and placement into tissue culture media for 6 weeks. Healing was evaluated by biomechanical criteria: tensiometric distraction to wound rupture generated true stress and energy absorption data. Burst-strength (maximum true stress) and toughness (energy absorption) were five times higher in the 48-hour group than in any other group; other groups were not different from each other. This study demonstrates long-term survival of full-thickness skin in culture and shows that full-thickness skin explants heal in tissue culture. Possible explanations for the narrow window of opportunity for harvest (48 hours, no more and no less) are discussed.

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