2 results match your criteria: "1 University of Limoges[Affiliation]"

Biotechnological Management of Skin Burn Injuries: Challenges and Perspectives in Wound Healing and Sensory Recovery.

Tissue Eng Part B Rev

February 2017

1 University of Limoges, Myelin Maintenance and Peripheral Neuropathies (EA 6309), Faculties of Medicine and Pharmacy, Limoges, France .

Many wound management protocols have been developed to improve wound healing after burn with the primordial aim to restore the barrier function of the skin and also provide a better esthetic outcome. Autologous skin grafts remain the gold standard in the treatment of skin burn, but this treatment has its limitation especially for patients presenting limited donor sites due to extensive burn areas. Deep burn injuries also alter the integrity of skin-sensitive innervation and have an impact on patient's quality of life by compromising perceptions of touch, temperature, and pain.

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Mesangial cells as amyloid factory: a unique contribution of animal models.

Kidney Int

October 2014

1] National Reference Center for AL Amyloidosis and Other Monoclonal Immunoglobulin Deposition Diseases, Limoges, Poitiers, France [2] University Hospital La Milétrie, University of Poitiers, Department of Nephrology and Kidney Transplantation, Poitiers, France.

AL amyloidosis is a severe complication of plasma-cell disorders, secondary to monoclonal immunoglobulin light chain (LC) deposition in the kidney and other organs. Though the physicochemical properties of amyloid-forming monoclonal LCs have been demonstrated to be involved in their propensity to aggregate, it remains unclear where, when, and finally why amyloid fibrils are formed in vivo. Teng et al.

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