Negative pressure therapy (NPT) is the controlled application of subatmospheric pressure to wounds. It has been shown to stimulate healing across a broad spectrum of soft-tissue wounds, at least in part from the application of mechanical stress on cells and tissues in the wound environment. This study tests the hypothesis that application of NPT to cranial critical-size defects (CSD) in skeletally mature rabbits leads to osseous healing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAfter injury to the CNS, the anatomical organization of the tissue is disrupted, posing a barrier to the regeneration of axons. Meningeal cells, a central participant in the CNS tissue response to injury, migrate into the core of the wound site in an unorganized fashion and deposit a disorganized extracellular matrix (ECM) that produces a nonpermissive environment. Previous work in our laboratory has shown that the presentation of nanometer-scale topographic cues to these cells influences their morphological, cytoskeletal, and secreted ECM alignment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe scarring response following injury to the central nervous system disrupts the anatomical organization of nervous tissue posing a barrier to the regeneration of axons. In the present study, using materials with nanometer level surface features we examined whether matrix organization could be controlled by engineering meningeal cell asymmetry. Following 5 days in culture, the organization of meningeal cells along with their cytoskeletal elements and extracellular matrix proteins was evaluated.
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