The skin has three layers:
Body cells can detect how crowded they are – the cell density. When cell density decreases, cell division occurs to make new cells and when cell density increases the rate of cell division slows down. This process is usually strictly controlled in the body, however, occasionally, the control mechanism fails and cell division continues at an abnormally high rate. This is how tumours occur in cancer. Cell division is important in skin repair after a cut or other injury to the skin. On the cut surface cell density is lowered, stimulating cell division. New cells gradually fill the gap and, once normal cell density is reached again, cell division slows down to the normal rate. Usually a cut will first fill up with blood which clots and, with other fibres, forms a scab. Underneath the scab the new tissue is being produced to heal the wound.
In recent years scientists have found a way to make artificial skin using some human skin cells and synthetic materials. It can be used to cover, for example, a burn or a chronic ulcer, and it gradually integrates with the patient′s own skin.