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Ultrastructural analysis of fetal rabbit wounds
Authors:Bruce A Mast  MD  ; Jeffrey H Haynes  MD  ; Thomas M Krummel  MD  ; I Kelman Cohen  MD  ; Robert F Diegelmann  PhD
Institution:Wound Healing Center of the Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery and the Department of Surgery, Medical College of Virginia, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA 23298, USA.
Abstract:Fetal wound healing proceeds rapidly with minimal inflammation and fibroplasia and little or no scar formation. These observations have led to the hypothesis that fetal wound healing more closely resembles regeneration rather than adult wound repair. To test this hypothesis, this study used ultrastructural analysis of fetal and adult fibroblasts and collagen to gain greater insight into differences in the healing processes. Full-thickness, primarily closed linear incisions were created dorsally on 24-day gestational age fetal rabbits (n = 9). The fetuses were killed 5 days later, and the wounds were excised and evaluated with transmission electron microscopy. Similarly, uninjured fetal skin of the same gestational age was obtained and analyzed. Adult rabbit dermal wounds were analyzed after 8 days of healing. Resting adult dermal fibroblasts had features of quiescent, inactive cells, whereas adult wound fibroblasts were highly active and filled with secretory vesicles. In contrast, both fetal normal dermal and wound fibroblasts appeared highly active and contained numerous secretory vesicles. In the adult wound, collagen fibril diameter was only 45% of the diameter of normal dermal collagen. However, fetal wound collagen fibrils were basically the same as normal dermal collagen, having a diameter that was 82% of the size of dermal collagen. These observations suggest that fetal wound fibroblasts do not require activation from an inactivated state and that fetal wound collagen deposition undergoes more rapid organization and maturation. These findings have significance in extending our understanding of the rapidity and functional superiority of fetal wound healing compared with adult wound healing.
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