Our skin is the largest organ in our body.
It provides our internal body with protection
from harmful agents that lead to infections
and plays a vital role in regulating our
body temperature. Often times, when someone
has suffered a severe burn, the damaged
skin cannot heal properly. Under these
circumstances the destroyed skin must
be replaced with healthy skin. The surgical
procedure used to replace damaged or destroyed
skin with healthy, viable skin is called
a skin graft surgery. The specifics of
skin graft surgery depend on the location
and severity of your burns.
The medical textbook definition of a
skin graft is the transplantation of a
piece of skin from one part of a body
to another. As discussed below, the healthy
skin preferably comes from the same person
needing the graft. In other words, doctors
highly prefer to take the donor skin from
the injured person who needs the graft.
The reason is that our body is much more
likely to accept the grafted skin when
it recognizes it as our own. Using donor
skin from the injured person greatly reduces
the chances of infection, or an autoimmune
rejection of the graft.
Recently, some burn centers have begun
grafting artificial skin onto burn victims.
Regardless of the type of skin graft,
usually all patients are left with residual
scarring from these procedures. The scarring
will usually occur at both the donor site
and the site of the burn. The size and
appearance of the scar will depend on
the severity of the burn and the amount
of skin needed for the graft.
The type of skin graft required depends
on the severity of the burn. Skin grafts
are usually described as falling within
one of the following four categories:
pinch graft, split-thickness graft, full-thickness
skin graft, and a pedicle graft. Pinch
grafts involve very small pieces of donor
skin. In time, these individual pieces
heal together. Generally, pinch grafts
are used in areas where blood circulation
is poor. A split-thickness graft involves
transplanting both the superficial layer
of skin along with some deep skin layers.
Generally, this type of graft is used
for non-weight-bearing areas. Common donor
sites are any location typically covered
by clothing. A full-thickness graft involves
all the skin layers along with the associated
blood vessels. Generally, this type of
graft is used for weight-bearing areas,
such as the feet, or for burns that involve
deep tissue. Common donor sites for full-thickness
grafts include skin and muscle flaps from
the back or abdominal wall. A pedicle
graft isn't removed in its entirety from
the donor site. Instead, a small flap
remains attached, to ensure a good blood
supply while the rest of the graft heals
in its new location. Generally, this type
of graft is used for the face or hands.
As mentioned above, the most effective
skin grafts involve transferring the patient's
own skin from a healthy part of the body
to cover the injured area. Over time,
the transplanted skin will grow and attach
at the donor site. This is called an autograft.
If the skin is taken from any source besides
the victim it is called an allograft.
Most likely, if you are a burn victim
who underwent a skin graft your surgeon
first attempted an autograft to decrease
the chances of your developing a serious
complication such as an infection. In
rare cases, when the burn victim has an
identical twin, surgeons will attempt
to graft skin from the healthy twin onto
the injured twin. After an autograft,
this is the most effective type of skin
grafts, although for obvious reasons it
is only available to a small percentage
of burn victims.
Beyond these two procedures, there is
a much higher risk that the body will
reject the new skin. However, surgeons
will often use skin from a cadaver as
a temporary patch to give the body time
to grow new skin of its own. In fact,
it is common for surgeons to use skin
from a cadaver to provide a temporary
covering, while they wait for a more ideal
time to harvest more skin from the victim.
In these cases the surgeon is using a
temporary cadaveric allograft to allow
the victim to generate more healthy skin
to for additional autograft surgeries.
All surgical procedures carry risks,
and your doctor will discuss these with
you prior to the procedure.
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