Healing Response

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Healing Response ( . English : healing = cure '; response = response') is a term from the Anglo-American medical literature. It generally stands for the body's reaction that leads to the healing of an illness or wound and can be found in German in the terms healing and wound healing . It is used very unspecifically and in a variety of ways (for example in wound management, arthroscopy and internal diseases). Occasionally (in a narrower sense) it can also be found in German literature, for example as a healing response technique for cruciate ligament ruptures .

Individual evidence

  1. Judith D. Salley-Guydon, Roy A. Tassava: Timing the commitment to a wound-healing response of denervated limb stumps in the adult newt, Notophthalmus viridescens . In: Wound Repair and Regeneration . tape 14 , no. 4 , July 2006, p. 479-483 , doi : 10.1111 / j.1743-6109.2006.00154.x .
  2. ^ A b Newsletter of the University Clinic Gießen and Marburg GmbH from May 6, 2006; pdf  ( page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.@1@ 2Template: Toter Link / www.uniklinikum-giessen.de  
  3. David J. Bentrem, Raymond J. JOEHL: Pancreas: Healing response in critical illness . In: Critical Care Medicine . tape 31 , Supplement, August 2003, p. S582-S589 , doi : 10.1097 / 01.CCM.0000081428.35729.73 , PMID 12907888 .