Health

Burns victim who lost 95% of his skin in horror house fire gets ‘new skin’ in world-first op


A MAN who was involved in a horrific house fire which burnt 85 per cent of his skin has received a world-first pioneering treatment to grow it back.

Glenn Ogg, 33, has had a full-body skin graft after docs were able to grow new skin in a lab – using cells taken from his scalp.

 Glenn Ogg, 33, was involved in a horrific house first which burnt 85pc of his skin

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Glenn Ogg, 33, was involved in a horrific house first which burnt 85pc of his skinCredit: EPA
 He managed to escape but suffered the brutal consequences

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He managed to escape but suffered the brutal consequencesCredit: Facebook/Glen Ogg
 Glenn has now received pioneering treatment to replace the burnt skin - by growing new skin from his own cells

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Glenn has now received pioneering treatment to replace the burnt skin – by growing new skin from his own cellsCredit: EPA

Patients who have more than 80 per cent burns tend not to have enough unburnt skin to make skin grafts.

Although Glenn can’t remember exactly what happened on the night of the fire, reports say that he managed to walk a kilometer away from the inferno.

ABC News says that Glenn was told that he’d waited for an ambulance with a neighbour and when it arrived, climbed onto the bed.

He was then flown to the Royal Adelaide Hosptial where he spent nine days in A&E.

85 per cent burns

85 per cent of his total body surface was covered in deep burns.

So medics decided to try two cutting edge technologies – both developed in hospital by the burns’ unit director, Professor John Greenwood.

The first treatment was called Biodegradable Temporising Matrix (BTM).

That involved removing Glenn’s deep burns and then applying a wound dressing.

Growing new skin from old cells

The second technology revolved around growing “composite cultured skin” in a lab.

That took around five weeks and used a graft taken from Glenn’s scalp to create 26 pieces.

Once the new skin was ready to be harvested, Glenn started having surgeries to close the burn wounds.

“BTM works by not only holding the burn wounds in a healthy condition, but improving them for the five weeks it takes to grow [the skin] and was pivotal in the early survival and progress of the healing of Glenn’s wounds,” Dr Greenwood explained.

A miracle recovery

“Every aspect of how these two technologies work together has seen Glenn not only survive, but make a remarkable recovery in less than six months.”

The composite cultured skin covered 50 per cent of Glenn’s total body surface area, with the remainder being covered by a mixtrue of standard grafting techniques.

Just 28 days after the fire – despite having no skin – Glenn took his first steps in hospital.

“In a comparable case reported in the UK, a patient spent more than 40 days in the ICU, left hospital after a year still unable to walk,” Dr Greenwood said.

The surgeon said that in most cases, people don’t survive and if they do, they’re normally tethered to ventilators for months.

They also experiences severe kidney failure from tissue injuries.

Glenn told ABC that he felt lucky and “a bit important” being the first person in the world to be treated with the new techniques.

The hospital now hopes to contact a clinical trial of the skin technique which is due to begin once Glenn is moved to a rehab centre next month.

 Glenn says that he feels "a bit important" that he's been the first person to try out this new therapy

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Glenn says that he feels “a bit important” that he’s been the first person to try out this new therapyCredit: EPA
 The treatment involved taking a skin graft from Glenn's head

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The treatment involved taking a skin graft from Glenn’s head
 That was then taken to a lab to grow for five weeks

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That was then taken to a lab to grow for five weeks
 Out of that one graft, docs managed to get over 20 pieces of skin to cover 50pc of Glenn's body

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Out of that one graft, docs managed to get over 20 pieces of skin to cover 50pc of Glenn’s body
 Usually people with such severe burns either don't survive or don't have enough unburnt skin to make skin grafts

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Usually people with such severe burns either don’t survive or don’t have enough unburnt skin to make skin graftsCredit: EPA
 Although he's the first to try it, he's hopefully not going to be the last

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Although he’s the first to try it, he’s hopefully not going to be the lastCredit: Facebook/Glen Ogg
 The hospital is now set to do a bigger clinical trial - once Glenn is moved to a rehab centre

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The hospital is now set to do a bigger clinical trial – once Glenn is moved to a rehab centreCredit: EPA


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