City
Epaper

UP to get its first skin bank in KGMU

By IANS | Updated: April 5, 2023 09:05 IST

Lucknow, April 5 Uttar Pradesh will soon have its first skin bank when the King George's Medical University ...

Open in App

Lucknow, April 5 Uttar Pradesh will soon have its first skin bank when the King George's Medical University (KGMU) opens one to facilitate the treatment of patients with burn injuries.

The bank will save such patients from life-threatening situations.

Prof Vijay Kumar, head of department of plastic surgery, said, "The infrastructure is ready. We have started the process to procure equipment and get a licence for the skin bank. All this will be completed in phases in a few weeks."

A skin bank is a place where skin from a donor, mostly people who wish to donate organs after death, is harvested and preserved. The skin bank is a valuable resource in providing allograft skin as a cover for partial or full thickness burn injuries.

"Our burns ward is occupied fully at any given time as the need for skin graft is increasing due to a rise in serious accidents. Once operational, the skin bank staff will coordinate with the families of brain-dead patients who are going for organ donation. Just as kidneys, liver, and cornea are obtained by a medical team, the skin will also be received and stored in temperature-controlled equipment after being lab tested," he said.

The kidney and liver cannot be stored and hence, are transplanted within a few hours of obtaining them. Cornea and skin can be stored.

"The skin will be provided to burn injury patients after matching the skin type. A skin graft not only helps in speedy recovery but also saves patients from further infection as it might happen in an open wound," said Prof Kumar.

In many burns' patients, their own skin is obtained from the body portion where the skin is in good condition, and grafted to cover the wound and help in speedy healing.

However, in several cases, a patient's body is burnt in such a manner that their own skin cannot be used. Here, skin banks will play a crucial role and provide skin to cover wounds.

In deep burn injuries, covering the wound with a skin graft becomes significant as it allows the wound to heal faster.

The skin bank is coming up in about 1,500 square feet area.

"In the first phase, we will use cryoprotective glycerol to preserve skin for up to three weeks and then with the help of deep freezers, we plan to preserve the same for up to three months," said Prof Kumar.

In India, he said, there are half a dozen skin banks but none in Uttar Pradesh.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Auricularia cornealucknowUttar PradeshVijay KumarMedical universityUttar pradesh mayawatiLucknow kanpurLucknow municipalNorthwest madhya pradesh &People of uttar pradeshRajasthan united
Open in App

Related Stories

NationalCNG Price Hike: Revised Rates Impact Noida, Greater Noida and Ghaziabad – Check Details Here

NationalKanpur Fire: Hundreds of Shops Gutted in Blaze at Bakarganj Market in Babupurwa (Watch Video)

NationalUttar Pradesh on High Alert After Blast Near Red Fort Metro Station in Delhi (VIDEO)

NationalUttar Pradesh Crime: Man Beaten With Rods and Sticks Outside House in Etawah; Disturbing CCTV Footage Surfaces

NationalUttar Pradesh: Class 9 Student Dies in Flour-Mill Explosion Inside Shop in Dehat ; Video Surfaces

Health Realted Stories

HealthNadda and Norwegian counterpart discuss healthcare partnership

HealthRajasthan: 65,490 animals treated via ‘unique’ initiative

HealthNurses are backbone of healthcare system: Govt officials

HealthEPFO ensuring that PF services reach every worker with speed, dignity: Dr Mansukh Mandaviya

HealthResearchers use AI to create first 100-billion-star Milky Way simulation