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Published byBeatriz Haggett Modified over 9 years ago
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Physiology of Skin Grafts
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SKIN: Physiology & Function Epidermis: – protective barrier (against mechanical damage, microbe invasion, & water loss) – high regenerative capacity – Producer of skin appendages (hair, nails, sweat & sebaceous glands)
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SKIN: Physiology & Function Dermis: – mechanical strength (collagen & elastin) – Barrier to microbe invasion – Sensation (point, temp, pressure, proprioception) – Thermoregulation (vasomotor activity of blood vessels and sweat gland activity)
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SKIN: Physiology & Function Immunological surveillance Most skin is thin, hair-bearing, has sebaceous glands Skin of palms/soles/flexor surface of digits is thick, not hair-bearing, no sebaceous glands Vascular supply confined to dermis
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SKIN: Anatomy
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Skin Grafts: Classification Full thickness skin grafts: - epidermis & full thickness of dermis Split skin graft: -epidermis & a variable proportion of dermis -thin, intermediate or thick
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Skin Grafts: SSG
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Skin Grafts: Classification Autografts Isografts Allografts Xenografts
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Skin Grafts: “Process of Take” Vascularity of donor site Tolerance to ischaemia Metabolic activity of the graft
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Skin Grafts: “Process of Take” 4 Phases: – Fibrin adhesion – Plasmatic imbibition – Revascularization: Inosculation & capillary ingrowth – Remodelling: Revascularization & fibrous attachment in restoring normal histological architecture
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Skin Grafts: “Process of Take” Plasmatic Imbibition: – Initially graft ischaemic (24 – 48 hrs) – Fibrin adhesion – Imbibition allows the graft to survive this period – ? Important for nutrition of graft – ? Stops drying out
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Skin Grafts: “Process of Take” Inosculation & capillary ingrowth: – At 48 hrs – Through fibrin layer – Capillary buds from recipient bed contact graft vessels – Open channels (neo-vascularization) pink graft
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Skin Grafts: “Process of Take” Revascularization & fibrous attachment: – Connection of graft & host vessels via anastomoses (inosculation) – Formation of new vascular channels by invasion of graft (neovascularisation) – Combination of old & new vessels (revascularisation) – Fibroblast proliferation: conversion of fibrin adhesion fibrous tissue attachment (anchorage within 4 days)
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Skin Grafts: “Process of Take”
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Skin Graft Take: Epidermis Days Histological changes 0 – 4 Epithelium doubles; crusting, scaling of epidermis; swelling of nuclei & cytoplasm; epithelial cell migration to surface; mitosis of follicular & granular cells 3 ++ mitotic activity in SSG not FTSG 4 – 8 Proliferation & thickening of epithelium (up to 7x) desquamation Week 4 Epidermis returned to normal thickness
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Skin Graft Take: Epidermis DayHistochemical changes 4 Increased RNA in basal cells, indicating protein synthesis 10 RNA returns to normal
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Skin Graft Take: Dermis Fibrous component: Collagen Hyalinized early and progressively replaced with new fibres by 6 weeks; Turned over 3-4X faster than normal skin. Elastin Accounts for resilience; Days 3-7 fragment; Replaced 4-6 weeks. Extracellular matrix Proteins direct the behaviour of keratinocytes; Communication between keratinocytes & fibroblasts.
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Skin Graft Take: Dermis Appendages: - sweating dependent on no. of transplanted sweat glands & degree of sympathetic reinnervation; will sweat like recipient site in FTSG only - sebaceous gland activity mostly in thicker grafts: SSG usually dry & shiny - hair grows from FTSG if well taken with no complications
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Skin Graft Healing Initially white then pinkens with new blood supply Lymphatic drainage by day 6 Collagen replacement from day 7 to week 6 Vascular remodelling for months
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Skin Graft Healing Contraction: - shrinks immediately due to elastic recoil: – FTSG 40%; medium SSG 20%; thin SSG 10%. - secondary contracture as heals: - FTSG remains same size after above shrinkage; - SSG will contract as much as possible; - more dermis = less contraction - ? Due to myofibroblasts
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Skin Graft Healing Reinnervation: – from margins to bed; – 4/52 to 2 years; – Depends on graft thickness and bed; – Uneventful healing leads to near normal 2PD; – Cold sensitivity can be a problem.
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Skin Graft Expansion Based on principle that wounds reepithelialized from the periphery Expansion provides larger areas from which epithelium can grow Larger areas can be covered with less skin
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Skin Graft Expansion Meshing - covers large area - easier to contour - fluid can drain through holes - cosmetic results less than ideal - various mesh ratio
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Skin Graft Survival Meticulous technique Atraumatic graft handling Well vascularized bed Haemostasis Immobilization No proximal constricting bandages
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Skin Graft Failure Haematoma Infection Seroma Mobility Inappropriate bed Dependency Arterial insufficiency Venous congestion Lymphatic stasis Technical – upside-down
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