Clearing the Haze: Understanding the Process of Scarring Following Corneal Injury – Professor Steven E. Wilson

May 22, 2020 | biology, health and medicine

Original Article Reference

https://doi.org/10.33548/SCIENTIA479

About this episode

Any injury such as trauma, surgery or infection to the cornea in the eye may result in persistent scarring (clinically referred to as fibrosis) due to the wound healing response. Professor Steven E. Wilson at the Cole Eye Institute of the Cleveland Clinic Foundation has identified that defective epithelial basement membrane (EBM) regeneration plays a central role in the development of scar producing myofibroblast cells. Critically, Professor Wilson suggests that the pathophysiological consequences of defective EBM regeneration are also likely to have wider relevance to the fibrosis that occurs in other organs, such as the lungs, heart, kidneys, and skin.

 

 

 

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