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. 2012 Jan 6;4(1):26-41.
doi: 10.3390/pharmaceutics4010026.

Tissue engineered human skin equivalents

Affiliations

Tissue engineered human skin equivalents

Zheng Zhang et al. Pharmaceutics. .

Abstract

Human skin not only serves as an important barrier against the penetration of exogenous substances into the body, but also provides a potential avenue for the transport of functional active drugs/reagents/ingredients into the skin (topical delivery) and/or the body (transdermal delivery). In the past three decades, research and development in human skin equivalents have advanced in parallel with those in tissue engineering and regenerative medicine. The human skin equivalents are used commercially as clinical skin substitutes and as models for permeation and toxicity screening. Several academic laboratories have developed their own human skin equivalent models and applied these models for studying skin permeation, corrosivity and irritation, compound toxicity, biochemistry, metabolism and cellular pharmacology. Various aspects of the state of the art of human skin equivalents are reviewed and discussed.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Hematoxylin and Eosin (H&E) stained EpiSkin® (A, 40×) and RealSkin® (B, 40×) specimens. The HSE samples were received from SkinEthic/L’Oreal (France) and fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde; after dehydration, the specimens were embedded in paraffin, and sectioned into 8 μm thickness. SB: stratum basale; G: granular cells; SC: stratum corneum; F: fibroblasts (bar = 100 μm).

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