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5.Excision & grafting. 3. Biological dressings. 1.Cleaning & debridement. General wound care. 2.Antimicrobial Agents . 4. Biosynthetic & Synthetic dressing. Excision and Grafting. Excision & Grafting the burn wound.
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5.Excision & grafting 3. Biological dressings 1.Cleaning & debridement General wound care 2.Antimicrobial Agents 4. Biosynthetic & Synthetic dressing
Excision & Grafting the burn wound • Full thickness or extensive burn-spontaneous reepithelialization is not possible. • Skin transplant or a graft of the patient`s own skin (autograft) is required. • Main area for grafting-face for cosmetic and psychologic reasons, and joint, for movement • If the burn is extensive, chest and abdomen is grafted to reduce surface area.
Excision & Grafting the burn wound • During the procedure of excision and grafting, eschar is removed. • A graft is placed on clean, viable tissue. • With early excision, function is restore and scar tissue formation is minimized. • Extensive bleeding may be expected. • Burn wound can be cover by patient`s skin (autograft)
Cultured epithelial autografts • Pt with large body surface area burns, limited unburned skin available as a donor site for grafting. • Cultured epithelial autograft (CEA) is one method to obtain skin tissue from a person with limited available skin for harvesting. • CEA is grown for biopsies obtained from the patient`s own skin.
Cultured epithelial autografts • Taking one or two small (2 to 3 cm long by 1cm wide) biopsy specimens from unburned skin.( usually the groin or axilla) • Performed as soon as possible when the pt has been identified. • Specimen is sent to lab. • Skin specimen are cultivated in the culture medium that contain epidermal growth factor.
Cultured epithelial autografts • 18 – 25 days cultivated keratinocytes expand up to 10,000 and form a sheet that can be used as skin graft. • The cultured skin placed on the patient`s excised burn wounds. • CEA grafts are only epidermal cells, good care is required to prevent injury or infection.
Cultured epithelial autografts • CEA grafts generate permanent skin coverage because they generate from pt`s own cells. • This type of skin graft has played an important role in the survival of the pt with major burns with limited skin for donor harvesting. • Problems related to CEA include thin, friable skin (lack of dermal cells) and contracture development.
Wound closure • Skin grafting is usually required or preferred with full-thickness or deep partial thickness. • After eshar removed and development of a base of granulating tissue, graft`s of patient`s own skin (autograft) are applied. • Blood flow is established by 3rd or 4th , and by 7th and 10th day postgrafting, vascularity continuity and wound closure have been established.
TransCyte • The most recent temporary skin substitute. • This bioengineered substance is derived form human fibroblast cells grown within mesh. • This product is also a bilayer skin substitute • The outer epidermal analog is a thin nonporous silicone film with barrier functions comparable to skin.
TransCyte • The inner dermal analog is layered with neonatal fibroblasts which produce products mainly collagen type I, fibronectin and glycosaminoglycans. • Cryo-preservation destroys the fibroblasts but preserves the activity of fibroblast.- • These products do stimulate the wound healing process. • A thin water layer is maintained at the wound surface for epidermal cell migration.
TransCyte • The nylon mesh provides flexibility and excellent adherence properties. • The product is peeled off after the wound has re-epithelialized. • TransCyte must be stored at –70 C° in order to preserve the bioactivity of the dermal matrix products. • TransCyte is also indicated for the temporary closure of the excised wound prior to grafting.
TransCyte Advantages • Bilayer analog • Excellent adherence to a superficial to mid-dermal burn • Decreases pain • Provides bioactive dermal components • Maintains flexibility • Good outer barrier function
TransCyte Disadvantages • Need to store frozen till use • Relatively expensive
TransCyte for Partial Thickness Hand Burn Cutting the sheet to fit with a small overlap followed by initial immobilization until adherent
TransCyte on Foot Burn (3 days) Note flexibility of the dressing
TransCyte on Leg Burn (10 days) Opaque appearance indicating re-epithelialization beneath dressing for removal
TransCyte (Day 12) Skin substitute being removed
Escharotomy • Full thickness deep dermal burns which are nearly circumferential on the limbs, neck, thorax. • Act like tourniquets with the development of edema. • All extremity burns at risk should be monitored with at least hourly vascular checks of pulse or Doppler signal. • Escharotomies are longitudinal or crisscross incisions through such deep burns. • Done without analgesia and on the ward. • Does not bleed much.
5.Excision & grafting 3. Biological dressings 1.Cleaning & debridement General wound care 2.Antimicrobial Agents 4. Biosynthetic & Synthetic dressing
ACUTE PHASE Other medication Nutrition Wound Cleansing and debridement Relieving anxiety
Rehabilitation PHASE
Physical & Occupational therapy • Rigorous physical therapy with the physical therapist • To maintain optimal joint function. • A good time for exercise is during and after hydrotherapy • Skin is softer and bulky dressings are removed. • The patient with neck burns should sleep without pillows • Head hanging slightly over the top of the mattress to encourage hyperextension
Positioning • During this phase, patient must be maintained in positions that prevent contractures. • Contracture= abnormal flexion and fixition of a join cause by muscle atrophy and shortening • Minimizes formation of edema. • Prevents tissue destruction, and maintains soft tissues to facilitate recovery. • Patients should be positioned in a direction of comfort, especially around joints and flexor surfaces.
Positioning • Extremities should be elevated above the level of the heart using pillows, blankets, and towels. • Lower extremities should be elevated when the patient is sitting. • Patients who do not have endotracheal tubes or central lines may be placed prone to avoid pressure to posterior areas
Position and splinting • Turned from side to side to prevent the development of sacral pressure sores and to minimize discomfort from pressure on burns to these areas. • Burns to the upper extremities or hands should be evaluated by an occupational therapist. • Splints immobilize body parts and prevent contracture of the joint.
Exercises • Physical therapists work in conjunction with occupational therapists. • Assessment by the physical therapist to assist with ambulation, range of motion exercises necessary splints • Exercises are begun early, active and passive. • Range of motion (R0M), performed every 2 hours at bedside. • Early ambulation
Pressure garment. • Fitting of pressure garment, can prevent or reduce hyperthropic scarring. • Customade elastic pressure garments for 6 months and 1 year postgraft. • The psychologist plays an integral part in facilitating the psychological recovery of burn patients, and should be consulted for every patient admitted to the burn unit.