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      A strain-programmed patch for the healing of diabetic wounds

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          Wound repair and regeneration.

          The repair of wounds is one of the most complex biological processes that occur during human life. After an injury, multiple biological pathways immediately become activated and are synchronized to respond. In human adults, the wound repair process commonly leads to a non-functioning mass of fibrotic tissue known as a scar. By contrast, early in gestation, injured fetal tissues can be completely recreated, without fibrosis, in a process resembling regeneration. Some organisms, however, retain the ability to regenerate tissue throughout adult life. Knowledge gained from studying such organisms might help to unlock latent regenerative pathways in humans, which would change medical practice as much as the introduction of antibiotics did in the twentieth century.
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            Wound repair and regeneration: mechanisms, signaling, and translation.

            The cellular and molecular mechanisms underpinning tissue repair and its failure to heal are still poorly understood, and current therapies are limited. Poor wound healing after trauma, surgery, acute illness, or chronic disease conditions affects millions of people worldwide each year and is the consequence of poorly regulated elements of the healthy tissue repair response, including inflammation, angiogenesis, matrix deposition, and cell recruitment. Failure of one or several of these cellular processes is generally linked to an underlying clinical condition, such as vascular disease, diabetes, or aging, which are all frequently associated with healing pathologies. The search for clinical strategies that might improve the body's natural repair mechanisms will need to be based on a thorough understanding of the basic biology of repair and regeneration. In this review, we highlight emerging concepts in tissue regeneration and repair, and provide some perspectives on how to translate current knowledge into viable clinical approaches for treating patients with wound-healing pathologies.
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              Cutaneous wound healing.

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                Author and article information

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                Journal
                Nature Biomedical Engineering
                Nat. Biomed. Eng
                Springer Science and Business Media LLC
                2157-846X
                July 04 2022
                Article
                10.1038/s41551-022-00905-2
                35788686
                dd1efcd7-b189-4cb4-95cd-4c8b6873877e
                © 2022

                https://www.springer.com/tdm

                https://www.springer.com/tdm

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