Citation only
via OpenAlex
Wound Therapy by Marrow Mesenchymal Cell Transplantation
Takafumi Yoshikawa, Hiroya Mitsuno, Iehisa Nonaka, Yasunori Sen, K Kawanishi, Yûji Inada, Yoshinori Takakura, Kazuo Okuchi, Akitaka Nonomura
Plastic & Reconstructive Surgery · 2008 · ▲ 286 citations
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Marrow mesenchymal cells are useful in regenerative medicine because they contain stem cells, but there have been few reports of clinical applications. The authors developed a new wound treatment technique by improving marrow mesenchymal cell culture methods and placing cultured cells in an artificial skin material. This new treatment was useful for tissue regeneration in 20 patients with skin wounds. METHODS: Marrow mesenchymal cells from a 46-year-old man were cultured and placed in artificial dermis made of collagen sponge. This composite graft was implanted subcutaneously into the back of a nude mouse and removed 10 days later; immunohistological analysis confirmed regeneration of subcutaneous tissue using human marrow mesenchymal cells. Next, in 20 patients (nine men and 11 women; average age, 64.8 years; range, 22 to 91 years) with intractable dermatopathies, 10 to 20 ml of bone marrow fluid was aspirated from the ilium and cultured in medium containing either fetal calf or autologous serum. The resulting cultured cells were placed in artificial dermis made of collagen sponge, and this composite graft was used to treat skin wounds. RESULTS: The wound mostly healed in 18 of the 20 patients; the remaining two patients died of causes unrelated to transplantation. In all patients, autologous marrow mesenchymal cell transplantation was shown to be therapeutically effective. CONCLUSIONS: In skin regeneration therapy using a marrow mesenchymal cell/artificial dermis composite graft, skin regeneration is possible with bone marrow aspiration, a minimally invasive procedure. Compared with existing skin grafting techniques, the present technique is practical and much less invasive.
◌ CITATION ONLY
Full text is not openly licensed for redistribution here. Read it at the source:
Provenance
- Source
- OpenAlex
- DOI
- 10.1097/01.prs.0000299922.96006.24
- Canonical
- link ↗
- Fetched
- 2026-06-19 MST
Cite this
APA
Yoshikawa, T., Mitsuno, H., Nonaka, I., Sen, Y., Kawanishi, K., Inada, Y., Takakura, Y., Okuchi, K., & Nonomura, A. (2008). Wound Therapy by Marrow Mesenchymal Cell Transplantation. <em>Plastic & Reconstructive Surgery</em>. https://doi.org/10.1097/01.prs.0000299922.96006.24
Vancouver
Yoshikawa T, Mitsuno H, Nonaka I, Sen Y, Kawanishi K, Inada Y, et al. Wound Therapy by Marrow Mesenchymal Cell Transplantation. Plastic & Reconstructive Surgery. 2008. doi:10.1097/01.prs.0000299922.96006.24.
BibTeX
@article{takafumi2008WoundT,
title = {Wound Therapy by Marrow Mesenchymal Cell Transplantation},
author = {Takafumi Yoshikawa and Hiroya Mitsuno and Iehisa Nonaka and Yasunori Sen and K Kawanishi and Yûji Inada and Yoshinori Takakura and Kazuo Okuchi and Akitaka Nonomura},
journal = {Plastic & Reconstructive Surgery},
year = {2008},
doi = {10.1097/01.prs.0000299922.96006.24},
}
Research neighborhood
References, citing works, and semantically nearest findings. Click a node to open it.
Related findings
EBioMedicine 2019
Open access · CC-BY
Senolytics decrease senescent cells in humans: Preliminary report from a clinical trial of Dasatinib plus Quercetin in individuals with diabetic kidney disease
Blood 1997
Open access · OA
The Biology and Clinical Uses of Blood Stem Cells
Blood 2003
Open access · OA
Plasticity of marrow-derived stem cells
Journal of Clinical Investigation 2022
Open access · CC-BY
Targeting memory T cell metabolism to improve immunity
Blood 2009
Open access · OA
Progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy after rituximab therapy in HIV-negative patients: a report of 57 cases from the Research on Adverse Drug Events and Reports project
Arthritis Research & Therapy 2007
Open access · OA