Donor Graft Articles & Analysis
2 articles found
Dermal substitutes are often used for patients who have sustained: Partial and full-thickness wounds Pressure ulcers, diabetic ulcers, venous ulcers, chronic ulcers, and vascular ulcers Surgical wounds (donor sites/grafts, post-Mohs surgery, post-laser surgery, podiatric, and wound dehiscence) Trauma wounds (abrasions, lacerations, second-degree burns, and ...
In many cases, large full-thickness wounds may require temporization due to the lack of suitable donor sites for primary skin grafting. Clinical research[1] indicates the temporization of deep, large wounds with dermal scaffolds can not only help provide physiological wound closure but also produce good functional and cosmetic outcomes. ...