Review on The Split-Thickness Skin Graf.
Association in 1886. His fashion advised to cut the skin with a razor blade as thin as possible via sharp vertical lacerations to produce thin strips of epidermis, only including small corridor of dermis. Thiersch’s fashion attained public hype, which is known as “Thiersch Graft”. Caused by the similarity of both discoveries, the system is also known as “Ollier – Thiersch graft”. In 1929, Blair and Brown presented their system of “disunited skin grafts” of intermediate consistence. These grafts differ from “Ollier–Thiersch graft” in regard of the consistence due to included layers of dermis. While Ollier and Thiersch advised to include only little further than the epithelial subcaste, the split skin grafts of intermediate consistence also included a perceptible quantum of the dermal subcaste. The idea was to save the advantages of both, the “Ollier–Thiersch graft”, as well those of the full- consistence skin graft. In 1941, Earl. Padgett, an American surgeon, developed a new system of split- consistence skin grafting by using a homemade dermatome. The “Three-quarter”- consistence skin graft demonstrated good graft take, and the dermatome enabled the possibility of new skin patron spots, which weren’t available by free hand skin grafting styles.