Abstract

Allogeneic dermal collagen has been evaluated as an alternative to skin autografts for the permanent replacement of lost or damaged skin in the rat. All non-collagenous structures were removed from full-thickness back skin by treatment with a solution of crystalline trypsin. Such dermal collagen preparations were grafted into skin wounds, examinated up to8/12 weeks after operation, and compared with excised wounds and skin isografts and allografts of the same initial size. The dermal collagen grafts, particularly when dressed with a sheet of dermal collagen, become recellularised, revascularised and re-epidermalised. Unlike the skin allografts, there was no evidence of cellular rejection. Whereas contracture of the excised wounds was delayed, but not suppressed, by applying a conventional dressing, collagen grafts maintained from 60 to 100 per cent of their original size. In contrast, equivalent skin isografts shrank to 50–60 per cent and showed persistent epidermal hyperplasia.

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