Australia sends 20,000 square centimetres of skin to help the survivors of the White Island disaster

Australia sends 20,000 square centimetres of skin to help the survivors of the White Island disaster

  • Skin donation organisations in Sydney and Victoria sent 10,000 square cm each 
  • The Queensland Skin Culture Centre remains on standby to sen more skin  
  • The White Island volcanic eruption in New Zealand left eight Australians dead 
  • Other victims suffered burns to 80 per cent of their bodies in NZ on Monday

Australia has sent 20,000 square centimetres of allograft skin to help survivors of the White Island volcanic eruption that has left eight Australians dead. 

The Donor Tissue Bank of Victoria and the Organ and Tissue donation service in Sydney both sent 10,000 square centimetres each to treat the deep-tissue burns suffered by those still clinging to life.

The Queensland Skin Culture Centre remains on standby to also send some. 

A number of the victims, who were wearing summer clothing when they toured the active volcano in New Zealand on Monday, have burns to up to 80 per cent of their bodies. 

Australia has sent 20,000 square centimetres of allograft skin to help survivors of the White Island volcanic eruption that has left eight Australians dead

Many also ingested ash and volcanic gases, resulting in horrific injuries to their lungs and airways, leaving them unable to talk.

All patients suffered burns requiring repair according to Peter Watson, chief medical officer at Counties Manakau Health.

Another 1.2 million square centimetres of skin shipped from the United States will arrive on Friday. 

‘We currently have supply but are urgently sourcing additional supplies to meet the demand addressing temporary skin grafts,’ he said.

The allograft skin is surgically grafted over the burns – without which many would have no chance of survival.

It is applied to the wounds after dead tissue is removed and stapled over the burn.

‘The layers that we provide are essentially the epidermis which is the top layer of skin and a small lawyer of dermis underneath the skin,’ said Dr Stefan Poniatowski, head of the Donor Tissue Bank of Victoria.

‘The immune system of the recipient will reject the epidermis layer, but the dermis will actually incorporate and provide a nice healthy wound bed for the patients’ own skin to be grown or applied over the top.

‘The allograft skin will be rejected, but it becomes a temporary biological dressing.’

The Donor Tissue Bank of Victoria and the Organ and Tissue donation service in Sydney both sent 10,000 square centimetres each to treat the deep-tissue burns suffered by those still clinging to life

The Donor Tissue Bank of Victoria and the Organ and Tissue donation service in Sydney both sent 10,000 square centimetres each to treat the deep-tissue burns suffered by those still clinging to life

The skin is collected from deceased donors, with a layer the thickness of a sunburn peel taken from the legs and back. 

‘The ideal treatment for burns victims is to use their own skin, so you take from a healthy site to transplant onto a wounded site,’ Dr Poniatowski told SBS.

‘But if you have major burns over significant parts of your body, more than 50 per cent burns for example, you can’t do that because you simply don’t have enough of your own skin.’

The allograft skin is stored in liquid nitrogen and safely kept at ultra-low temperatures for up to five years. 

There are only three skin banks in Australia, and the New Zealand donation has had a ‘significant impact’ on available supplies. 

Dr Poniatowski said all three centres were preparing more allograft stock for release with the demand to increase as patients are repatriated to Australia where they could face years of treatment.

Major events have tested skin stockpiles in the past, particularly in the Bali bombings in 2002, with banks completely wiped out by Victoria’s Black Saturday fires in 2009.

A number of the victims, who were wearing summer clothing when they toured the active volcano in New Zealand on Monday, have burns to up to 80 per cent of their bodies (pictured: Air Force officers preparing medical equipment to treat those injured at White Island)

A number of the victims, who were wearing summer clothing when they toured the active volcano in New Zealand on Monday, have burns to up to 80 per cent of their bodies (pictured: Air Force officers preparing medical equipment to treat those injured at White Island)

HOW IS SKIN DONATED, STORED AND APPLIED? 

Healthy skin is taken from elsewhere on the victim’s body, or from a deceased donor.  

The skin collected from deceased donors is the thickness of a sunburn peel taken from the legs and back.  

The skin is stored in liquid nitrogen and safely kept at ultra-low temperatures for up to five years. 

The applied skin acts as a plaster and helps to heal wounds and stop infections. 

Specialists surgeons first remove damaged skin to expose healthy tissue, then implant and graft on the donor skin. 

The new dermis will embed into the patient’s dermis and allow their own skin to grow over the wound and heal. 

Using donor skin is the only option when patients are suffering from severe infection, because taking skin from elsewhere on the patient’s body can create more areas of infection. 

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