Wound healing refers to a living organism's replacement of destroyed or damaged tissue by newly produced tissue.
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Wound healing refers to a living organism's replacement of destroyed or damaged tissue by newly produced tissue.
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Wound care encourages and speeds wound healing via cleaning and protection from reinjury or infection.
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Wound healing is classically divided into hemostasis, inflammation, proliferation, and remodeling.
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Scarless wound healing is a concept based on the healing or repair of the skin after injury with the aim of healing with subjectively and relatively less scar tissue than normally expected.
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Scarless healing is sometimes mixed up with the concept of scar free healing, which is wound healing which results in absolutely no scar .
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However, the ultimate goal of wound healing biology is to induce a more perfect reconstruction of the wound area.
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Scarless wound healing only occurs in mammalian foetal tissues and complete regeneration is limited to lower vertebrates, such as salamanders, and invertebrates.
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Therefore, foetal wound healing can be used to provide an accessible mammalian model of an optimal healing response in adult human tissues.
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In print the antiquated concept of scarless Wound healing was brought up the early 20th century and appeared in a paper published in the London Lancet.
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The biologically active chemicals that play an important role in wound healing are modeled with Fickian diffusion to generate concentration profiles.
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Wound healing closure is performed with sutures, staples, or adhesive tape or glue.
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