How a wound heals itself Sarthak Sinha

The largest organ in your body
isn’t your liver or your brain.

It’s your skin, with a surface area
of about 20 square feet in adults.

Though different areas of the skin
have different characteristics,

much of this surface performs
similar functions,

such as sweating, feeling heat and cold,
and growing hair.

But after a deep cut or wound,

the newly healed skin will look different
from the surrounding area,

and may not fully regain all
its abilities for a while, or at all.

To understand why this happens, we need to
look at the structure of the human skin.

The top layer, called the epidermis,

consists mostly of hardened cells,
called keratinocytes,

and provides protection.

Since its outer layer is constantly being
shed and renewed,

it’s pretty easy to repair.

But sometimes a wound penetrates
into the dermis,

which contains blood vessels
and the various glands and nerve endings

that enable the skin’s many functions.

And when that happens, it triggers the
four overlapping stages

of the regenerative process.

The first stage, hemostasis, is the skin’s
response to two immediate threats:

that you’re now losing blood

and that the physical barrier of
the epidermis has been compromised.

As the blood vessels tighten to minimize
the bleeding,

in a process known as
vasoconstriction,

both threats are averted by forming
a blood clot.

A special protein known as fibrin forms
cross-links on the top of the skin,

preventing blood from flowing out
and bacteria or pathogens from getting in.

After about three hours of this,
the skin begins to turn red,

signaling the next stage, inflammation.

With bleeding under control
and the barrier secured,

the body sends special cells to fight any
pathogens that may have gotten through.

Among the most important of these
are white blood cells,

known as macrophages,

which devour bacteria and damage tissue
through a process known as phagocytosis,

in addition to producing growth factors
to spur healing.

And because these tiny soldiers
need to travel

through the blood to
get to the wound site,

the previously constricted
blood vessels now expand

in a process called vasodilation.

About two to three days after the wound,

the proliferative stage occurs, when
fibroblast cells begin to enter the wound.

In the process of collagen deposition,

they produce a fibrous protein
called collagen in the wound site,

forming connective skin tissue
to replace the fibrin from before.

As epidermal cells divide to reform
the outer layer of skin,

the dermis contracts to close the wound.

Finally, in the fourth stage
of remodeling,

the wound matures as the newly deposited
collagen is rearranged and converted

into specific types.

Through this process,
which can take over a year,

the tensile strength of the new skin
is improved,

and blood vessels and other connections
are strengthened.

With time, the new tissue
can reach from 50-80%

of some of its original healthy function,

depending on the severity of the initial
wound and on the function itself.

But because the skin
does not fully recover,

scarring continues to be a major clinical
issue for doctors around the world.

And even though researchers have made
significant strides

in understanding the healing process,

many fundamental mysteries
remain unresolved.

For instance, do fibroblast cells arrive
from the blood vessels

or from skin tissue adjacent to the wound?

And why do some other mammals,
such as deer,

heal their wounds much more efficiently
and completely than humans?

By finding the answers to these questions
and others,

we may one day be able to heal ourselves
so well that scars will be just a memory.

你身体中最大的器官
不是你的肝脏或你的大脑。

这是你的皮肤,
成人的表面积约为 20 平方英尺。

尽管皮肤的不同区域
具有不同的特征,

但该表面的大部分都具有
相似的功能,

例如出汗、感觉冷热
以及生长头发。

但经过深切或伤口后

,新愈合的皮肤看起来会
与周围不同

,可能会
在一段时间内无法完全恢复所有能力,或者根本无法恢复。

要了解为什么会发生这种情况,我们需要
看看人类皮肤的结构。

顶层称为表皮,

主要由称为角质形成细胞的硬化细胞组成,

并提供保护。

由于它的外层不断
脱落和更新,

因此很容易修复。

但有时伤口会
渗入真皮层,真皮

层包含血管
、各种腺体和神经末梢,这些腺体和神经末梢

使皮肤具有多种功能。

当这种情况发生时,它会触发再生过程的
四个重叠

阶段。

第一阶段,止血,是皮肤
对两个直接威胁的反应

:你现在正在失血

,表皮的物理
屏障已经受损。

随着血管收紧以最大限度地减少
出血,

在称为血管收缩的过程中

通过形成血凝块来避免这两种威胁

一种称为纤维蛋白的特殊蛋白质
在皮肤顶部形成交联,

防止血液流出
和细菌或病原体进入

。大约三个小时后
,皮肤开始变红,

标志着下一阶段,炎症 .

随着出血得到控制
并且屏障得到保护

,身体会发送特殊细胞来对抗
可能已经通过的任何病原体。

其中最重要的
是白细胞,

称为巨噬

细胞

,除了产生生长因子
以促进愈合外,它们还通过称为吞噬作用的过程吞噬细菌并破坏组织。

而且由于这些小士兵
需要

穿过血液
到达伤口部位

,以前收缩的
血管现在会

在一个称为血管舒张的过程中扩张。

伤口后大约两到三天

,会出现增殖阶段,此时
成纤维细胞开始进入伤口。

在胶原蛋白沉积的过程中,

它们会
在伤口部位产生一种称为胶原蛋白的纤维蛋白,

形成结缔皮肤组织
以取代之前的纤维蛋白。

当表皮细胞分裂以
改造皮肤外层时

,真皮收缩以闭合伤口。

最后,在重塑的第四
阶段,

随着新沉积的
胶原蛋白重新排列并转化

为特定类型,伤口成熟。

通过
这个可能需要一年多的过程,

新皮肤的抗拉强度得到了
提高

,血管和其他连接
也得到了加强。

随着时间的推移,新组织
可以

达到其原有健康功能的 50-80%,

具体取决于初始伤口的严重程度
和功能本身。

但由于皮肤
没有完全恢复,

疤痕仍然是世界各地医生面临的主要临床
问题。

尽管研究人员

在理解愈合过程方面取得了重大进展,但

许多基本谜团
仍未解开。

例如,成纤维细胞是
来自血管

还是来自伤口附近的皮肤组织?

为什么其他一些哺乳动物,
比如鹿,比人类

更有效、更彻底地治愈伤口

通过找到这些问题和其他问题的答案

我们也许有朝一日能够很好地治愈自己
,以至于伤疤只是记忆。