The Irish Mail on Sunday

Will skin ‘paste’ be the future of tending to burns?

- By Pat Hagan

DOCTORS have developed a technique to treat severe burns using a paste made from tiny fragments of a patient’s skin.

The procedure involves taking a small, healthy patch of skin from the thigh, chopping it into tiny pieces and mixing it with a gel. The resulting paste is then applied to the wound.

Results have shown that each tiny fragment can grow to 500 times its original size, allowing for a much smaller amount of healthy skin to be grafted than is currently removed to cover burns.

Experts say using the skin paste will allow patients to avoid the permanent scars characteri­stic of the traditiona­l methods as well as the agonising experience of undergoing large skin grafts.

‘Harvesting skin can be extremely painful for the patient — it’s like the worst carpet burn you have ever had,’ says Dr Riyam Mistry, a plastic surgery expert at the University of Oxford.

A skin graft involves removing a patch of healthy skin and stretching it over the burned area before being stitched or glued into place. For large burns, the patches taken can be very big and usually require general anaestheti­c when being removed. This is often shaved off the back of the thigh. But some experts believe the skin paste technique could mark the end of this practice.

A slither of skin was ‘minced’ into pieces measuring just a third of a millimetre in diameter. A water-based gel was added to keep the cells hydrated before they were injected into the burn. Within 28 days, the area applied with the paste had healed just as quickly as with normal grafts.

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