Granulation tissue

Healing tissue that forms in response to any injury or surgical insult of soft tissue and consists of fibroblasts, capillary buds, inflammatory cells, and edema.


A mixture of proteins and cells produced by the fibroblast growth that results from a wound.


A growth of young capillaries and fibrous tissue cells which is the basis for healing in some wounds.


Soft tissue, consisting mainly of tiny blood vessels and fibres, which forms over a wound.


Rough, pink tissue that forms around the edges of a wound as a normal part of healing. Granulation tissue contains new connective tissue in the form of small, grainy particles, as well as a great many tiny blood vessels, or capillaries.


The newly formed vascular and connective tissue produced in the early stages of wound healing.


During the process of wound healing, a unique type of tissue emerges, characterized by an uneven or irregular texture and a profuse network of blood capillaries.


Granulation tissue is a red, moist, and granular tissue that forms on the surface of an ulcer or an open wound as part of the healing process.


 


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