Fish can help heal skin wounds

The researchers concluded that the findings could lead to new therapies for human patients.

Read more...

By (IANS)

Published: Fri 13 Feb 2015, 9:44 AM

Last updated: Thu 25 Jun 2015, 8:20 PM

Beijing  - A protein found in tilapia fish could heal skin wounds, finds a new study. 

Applying collagen—a major structural protein in animals—to wounds can help encourage skin to heal faster, said researcher Xiumei Mo from Donghua University in Shanghai, China.

But when the protein dressing comes from mammals, it has the potential to transmit conditions such as foot-and-mouth disease.

Searching for an alternative source of collagen, the researchers developed nanofibres from tilapia collagen and used them to cover skin wounds on rats.

The rats with the nanofibre dressing healed faster than those without it. In addition, lab tests on cells suggested that the fish collagen was not likely to cause an immune reaction.

The researchers concluded that the findings could lead to new therapies for human patients.

The findings appeared in the journal ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces.

(IANS)

Published: Fri 13 Feb 2015, 9:44 AM

Last updated: Thu 25 Jun 2015, 8:20 PM

Recommended for you

lifestyle

Inside the mind of an overthinker

Ahead of her appearance at the Emirates Airline Festival of Literature, well-known clinical psychologist and bestselling author Dr Jessamy Hibberd talks at length about factors that drive us to overanalyse things

lifestyle8 hours ago