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Mesenchymal Stem Cells in Burn Wound Management

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms232315339

Keywords

stem cells; burn wound; adipose-derived stem cells; burns

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Mesenchymal stem cells have regenerative potential and can be used in the treatment of burn wounds. They secrete growth factors, promote tissue regeneration, and produce exosomes. Cellular therapy can reduce healing time without major side effects. However, due to heterogeneity of studies, it remains an experimental method.
Mesenchymal stem cells have a known regenerative potential and are used in many indications. They secrete many growth factors, including for fibroblasts (FGF), endothelium (VEGF), as well as 14 anti-inflammatory cytokines, and they stimulate tissue regeneration, promoting the secretion of proteins and glycosaminoglycans of extracellular matrices, such as collagen I, II, III, and V, elastin, and also metalloproteinases. They secrete exosomes that contain proteins, nucleic acids, lipids, and enzymes. In addition, they show the activity of inactivating free radicals. The aim of this study was an attempt to collect the existing literature on the use of stem cells in the treatment of a burn wound. There were 81 studies included in the analysis. The studies differed in terms of the design, burn wound model, source of stem cells, and methods of cellular therapy application. No major side effects were reported, and cellular therapy reduced the healing time of the burn wound. Few case reports on human models did not report any serious adverse events. However, due to the heterogeneity of the evidence, cellular therapy in burn wound treatment remains an experimental method.

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