Do children’s implants grow with their bodies?

A child’s skin graft is an area that grows with the body.
Generally speaking, the skin after skin grafting in children will continue to survive as the child grows. Skin grafting is usually done by removing healthy skin from somewhere on the body to cover the affected area. After the successful surgery, the grafted skin will merge with the surrounding tissues and grow normal skin tissues, with no obvious difference from normal skin, and the area after skin grafting in children will gradually grow with the natural development of their bodies.
It is worth noting that after short-term skin grafting, attention should be paid to the protection and maintenance of the grafted skin, disinfection should be done well to ensure that the wound is dry and clean to prevent infection, and excessive touching and squeezing should be avoided as much as possible before the grafted skin is completely fused with the surrounding tissues, to prevent it from hemorrhaging and necrosis.