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HANGZHOU, Feb. 27 (Xinhuanet) -- China, a nation with
a long history of silk utilization, has recently developed a new use for the
material.
Scientists from east China's Zhejiang Province have used silk to create a new type of "artificial skin" which is
expected to help treat skin defects and reduce scars.
Min Sijia, major developer of the new material and
associate professor with the Animal Science Institute of the Zhejiang University
based in the provincial capital of Hangzhou, has named the new technology pure
silk fiborin biodressing.
Min said as a pure biological product, silk is soft
and pliable, blessed with good permeability and natural affinity with human
skin. She said some dermatologists even suggest that their patients should wear
silk underwear, which is conducive to skin health.
Fascinated by silk's quality and function, Min began
to study the possible medical uses of the material in 1996, when she worked for
her PhD in Japan.
After 10 years of research, Min succeeded in creating
pure silkfibroin material with no chemical residue.
At her lab in Zhejiang University, Min showed the new
material to a Xinhua journalist. She put a white, round piece of "artificial
skin" on the back of her hand. Then the biodressing quickly connected with her
skin in a seamless way.
"It can be made into any shape with a thickness of
only half a millimeter. Its softness is similar to that of human skin, with good
tenacity and absorption," said Min.
The biodressing is easy to preserve. It can be stored
in regular refrigerators and be used after thawing, she added.
Animal tests found that the "artificial skin" could
enable an opening of wound with a diameter of three centimeters to heal up in
less than 20 days.
It is reported that in China there are 3.2 million
patients suffering form skin defects.
Currently, pig and human skin are often used to cure
skin defects, which are easy to contaminate and are often immunologically
rejected. Though the United States and Japan have begun to make medical
dressings with collagen and chitose, the materials are too expensive to be
widely used in China.
Min Sijia said the silk fibroin biodressing also has
no adhesion with newly grown human tissue under a moisturized condition, leaving
no secondary trauma.
The new technology has passed experts' appraisal and
been patented, said Min's partner, Han Chunmao.
However, Min said, "The technology still needs more
clinical tests before being put into production to benefit skin defect
sufferers." Enditem |