Long-term follow-up study of artificial dermis composed of outer silicone layer and inner collagen sponge.

In the oriental population including the Japanese, donor-site hypertrophy is more pronounced than in Caucasians. To solve the problem of donor-site morbidity and to ensure graft 'take', we started the second-stage procedure of a thin split thickness skin graft (STSG) onto acellular 'bilayer artificial skin', or 'artificial dermis'. Since reporting the original version of the material (OV), a revised version (RV) and the present version (PV, Pelnac) have been developed in stages to eliminate inconveniences associated with its use and to reduce the primary cost of manufacture. We have now used our materials, consisting of OV, RV and PV, on 52 skin defects in 41 patients. STSG took almost perfectly in all patients. The long-term results of these three materials were investigated in 20 patients who had been followed up for more than 2 years, excluding three patients whose donor sites had been directly closed. The longest and the mean follow-up periods of these patients were 12 years 5 months and 6 years 10 months, respectively. At the grafted sites, wrinkles caused by shrinkage, partial depigmentation and hypertrophy were observed in five (25%), one (5%) and one (5%) of the 20 patients, respectively. At the donor sites, slight unsightliness was observed in five (25%) of the 20 patients. Excellent or good results were obtained in 18 (90%) of the 20 patients in comprehensive evaluation. There were no significant differences in the long-term follow-up evaluations among these materials. In conclusion, the long-term postoperative appearance of the STSG site was good though a very thin (approximately 0.2mm) STSG is used; scarring of the donor site was minimal and it was possible to take repeated skin grafts from the same donor site.

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