inflammatory signaling occurring in a delayed bone-healing model supports the finding that timely termination of inflammation furthers the regenerative process. ... Katharina,Schmidt-Bleek,Hanna,... - 《Journal of Tissue Engineering & Regenerative Medicine》 被引量: 62发表: 2012年 The regenerative pe...
Bone healing is sensitive to the initial mechanical conditions with tissue differentiation being determined within days of trauma. Whilst axial compression is regarded as stimulatory, the role of interfragmentary shear is controversial. The purpose of this study was to determine how the initial ...
This study investigated the characteristics of wound healing after varying doses of local radiation and explored possible causes of the delay in healing caused by radiation. A full-thickness dorsal longitudinal skin tissue, 2cm in diameter, was excised after local irradiation on one side of the ...
A mechano-regulation model for tissue differentiation during fracture healing: Analysis of gap size and loading Bone has a capability to repair itself when it is fractured. Repair involves the generation of intermediate tissues, such as fibrous connective tissue, car... D Lacroix,PJ Prendergast - ...
Effective wound healing is defined by the restoration of functional tissue integrity. Proper wound healing is achieved by adequate activation and infiltration of inflammatory cells, neutrophils and macrophages, which produce pro-inflammatory cytokines such as tumor necrosis factor α (TNF-α) and ...
Nanomaterials also find wide application in the construction sector, mainly as elements of composites, because of their impact on the properties of the material, such as increased strength, lightness, and better thermal and electrical conductivity, as well as self-healing, corrosion protection ...
Related to Proliferative phase: Proliferative phase of wound healingpro·lif·er·ate (prə-lĭf′ə-rāt′) v. pro·lif·er·at·ed, pro·lif·er·at·ing, pro·lif·er·ates v.intr. 1. To grow or multiply by rapidly producing new tissue, parts, cells, or offspring. 2. To...
3. splint bone; in veterinary anatomy, refers to the vestigial second and fourth metacarpal and metatarsal bones of horses that are closely apposed to the third metacarpal or metatarsal by a periosteum anchor. 4. In equine medicine, the term applied to the hard swelling (soft tissue inflamma...
In histopathology research, a specimen is dyed with stains [e.g., hematoxylin-eosin] to highlight components of the tissue under a microscope. Histopathology is an important tool for the accurate diagnosis of cancer diseases. According to the Nottingham Grading System, assessment of breast cancer ...
Using tumor samples from two independent patients with Ewing’s sarcoma, we performed immunohistochemistry and imaged the localization of ARID1A. Surprisingly, ARID1A showed increased expression in Ewing’s sarcoma patient tissue resulting in visible nuclear foci, while normal bone tissue exhibited much ...