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1.
Surgery ; 129(2): 203-8, 2001 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11174713

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Optimal healing of the fascial layer is a necessary component of complete abdominal wall repair. The majority of acute wound healing studies have focused on the dermis. We designed a model of abdominal wall repair that, to our knowledge, for the first time simultaneously characterizes differences in the wound healing trajectories of the fascia and skin. METHODS: Full-thickness dermal flaps were raised on the ventral abdominal walls of rats, and midline fascial celiotomies were completed. The dimensions of the flap were developed so as to have no detrimental effect on skin healing. The dermal flaps were replaced so that the fascial incisions would heal separately from the overlying skin incisions. Animals were killed 7, 14, and 21 days after operation and fascial and dermal wounds were harvested and tested for breaking strength. Fascial and dermal wounds were also compared histologically for inflammatory response, fibroplasia, and collagen staining. RESULTS: Fascial wound breaking strength exceeded dermal wound breaking strength at all time points (9.16 +/- 2.17 vs 3.51 +/- 0.49 N at 7 days, P <.05). Fascial wounds also developed greater fibroblast cellularity and greater collagen staining 7 days after the incision. There was no difference in wound inflammatory response. CONCLUSIONS: Fascial incisions regain breaking strength faster than simultaneous dermal incisions. The mechanism for this appears to involve increased fascial fibroplasia and collagen production after acute injury.


Subject(s)
Abdominal Muscles/surgery , Dermatologic Surgical Procedures , Fasciotomy , Wound Healing , Abdominal Muscles/pathology , Animals , Fascia/pathology , Male , Models, Animal , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Skin/pathology , Surgical Flaps , Surgical Wound Dehiscence/pathology , Tensile Strength , Time Factors
2.
Semin Pediatr Surg ; 10(1): 38-43, 2001 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11172573

ABSTRACT

A regional pediatric trauma center and a level I trauma center with pediatric commitment in the same city developed a synergistic relationship addressing all aspects of care for pediatric trauma patients. Although it is unlikely that this model could be used in its entirety by all similar institutions, the principles may prove helpful in creating guidelines and relationships. Categorization, optimal use of resources, timely transportation of seriously injured children to the appropriate facility, and maintaining urgent care capabilities of each institution to care for seriously injured children are imperative. The combined effort resulted in our level I trauma center being verified by the American College of Surgeons and designated by our state Health Department as meeting all the criteria for pediatric trauma care. This experience should encourage every pediatric trauma center located in a children's hospital to become a regional pediatric trauma center. The real benefit from the relationship is that injured children receive optimal care at both institutions.


Subject(s)
Trauma Centers/organization & administration , Adult , Child , Colorado , Humans , Pediatrics , Trauma Centers/standards
3.
J Surg Res ; 95(1): 54-60, 2001 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11120636

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Abdominal wall wound failure remains a common surgical problem. The signals that activate normal fibroplastic repair versus regeneration pathways are unknown. Transforming growth factor beta levels rise during incisional healing but fall during hepatic regeneration. Changes in the injured host cytokine milieu may therefore differentially effect abdominal wall repair versus hepatic regeneration. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Forty-eight rats were divided into four groups (n = 12). Groups 1-3 underwent sham celiotomy, 70% hepatectomy, or 80% enterectomy with anastamosis. Incisions from Group 4 were treated with either 1 microg of transforming growth factor beta(2) (TGF-beta(2)) or vehicle following hepatectomy. Isolated fascial and dermal incisions were harvested and tested for breaking strength on POD 7. Serum (TGF-beta(2)) and hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) levels were measured by ELISA. RESULTS: Recovery of incisional wound breaking strength was delayed following hepatectomy but not enterectomy (P<0.002). The inhibitory effect was observed in both the fascia and the dermis of the abdominal wall. TGF-beta(2) levels were depressed in hepatectomy animals on POD 7, while at the same time HGF levels were elevated. Exogenous TGF-beta(2) shifted the healing trajectory of deficient wounds back toward a control pattern. CONCLUSION: Abdominal wall fascial and dermal healing is delayed during hepatic regeneration. Elevated HGF and depressed TGF-beta(2) suggest a host mechanism that prioritizes hepatic parenchymal regeneration over fibroplastic repair (scar). Observations such as these are needed as therapeutic wound healing enters the clinical realm.


Subject(s)
Abdominal Muscles/injuries , Liver Regeneration , Wound Healing , Animals , Body Weight , Eating , Hepatectomy , Hepatocyte Growth Factor/blood , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Transforming Growth Factor beta/blood
4.
J Surg Res ; 92(1): 11-7, 2000 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10864475

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The time required for incisional healing accounts for the majority of postoperative pain and convalescence. Impaired healing prolongs the process further. If a method for accelerating acute incisional wound healing could be developed, patients would benefit from decreased wound failure and an earlier return to their premorbid condition. MATERIALS AND METHODS: In a rat dermal model, cytokine or vehicle infiltration prior to incision was performed using a single dose or four daily doses preincision. Planned incision sites were primed with the proinflammatory cytokine granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) or platelet-derived growth factor BB (PDGF-BB) in an effort to activate the inflammatory phase of healing prior to wounding. At the time of incision closure, one half of the incisions were treated with transforming growth factor beta(2) (TGF-beta(2)). Incisional sites were biopsied and stained with hematoxylin and eosin and immunohistochemistry for inflammatory cells and fibroblast populations and breaking strength was measured. RESULTS: Priming skin with GM-CSF or PDGF-BB mimicked the early inflammatory phase of wound healing. Macrophage staining (EB1) and fibroblast staining (vimentin) were significantly increased prior to incision. Inflammatory priming as well as priming coupled with TGF-beta(2) at the time of the incision closure synergistically improved breaking strength. CONCLUSION: This study demonstrates that sequential therapy consisting of priming of tissue with an inflammatory cytokine followed by application of a proliferative cytokine at the time of incision closure nearly doubles the breaking strength of an acute wound. By manipulating the inflammatory and early proliferative phases of wound healing with tissue growth factors, it may be possible to accelerate acute wound repair and shift the wound healing trajectory to the left.


Subject(s)
Granulocyte-Macrophage Colony-Stimulating Factor/pharmacology , Transforming Growth Factor beta/pharmacology , Wound Healing/drug effects , Wound Healing/immunology , Animals , Anticoagulants/pharmacology , Becaplermin , Dermis/cytology , Dermis/drug effects , Dermis/immunology , Fibroblasts/cytology , Injections, Intradermal , Male , Platelet-Derived Growth Factor/pharmacology , Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-sis , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Surgical Procedures, Operative
5.
Burns ; 26(2): 156-70, 2000 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10716359

ABSTRACT

The accuracy and variability of burn size calculations using four Lund and Browder charts currently in clinical use and two Rule of Nine's diagrams were evaluated. The study showed that variability in estimation increased with burn size initially, plateaued in large burns and then decreased slightly in extensive burns. The Rule of Nine's technique often overestimates the burn size and is more variable, but can be performed somewhat faster than the Lund and Browder method. More burn experience leads to less variability in burn area chart drawing estimates. Irregularly shaped burns and burns on the trunk and thighs had greater variability than less irregularly shaped burns or burns on more defined anatomical parts of the body.


Subject(s)
Burns/classification , Medical Illustration , Trauma Severity Indices , Adolescent , Adult , Burn Units , Burns/diagnosis , Child , Child, Preschool , Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Observer Variation , Reproducibility of Results
6.
Wound Repair Regen ; 8(6): 511-6, 2000.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11208178

ABSTRACT

Accurate and clinically practical methods for measuring the progress of acute wound healing is necessary before interventions designed to optimize and even accelerate acute wound healing can be applied. Complete wound closure rates and operative wound closure severity are irrelevant to most acute wounds since most are closed at the time of primary tissue repair and remain closed throughout healing. Analogous to chronic wound closure, the rate of increase of incision tensile strength progressively decreases as time passes and 100% unwounded tissue strength is never achieved making the endpoint definition of "healed" vague. Conceptualizing acute wound healing in terms of its design elements with reintegration into a final outcome lends itself to the description of acute wound healing as a mathematical trajectory. Frequently such an equation is a rate expressing the change in an acute healing parameter, most often tensile strength, over time. Such an approach also normalizes misinterpretations in analysis or errors in theory developed by measuring healing parameters at fixed points in time. Distributions of fractional strength gain times (e.g., 85% normal strength) can be determined using statistical methodology similar that used for failure time of survival analysis. Preclinical studies show that acute wound healing trajectories can be shifted to the left from a "normal" or "impaired" curve to an accelerated or more "ideal" curve. A useful method for measuring acute wound healing outcomes is therefore required before the basic science of acute wound healing is inevitably applied to the problem of acute surgical wounds.


Subject(s)
Wound Healing/physiology , Acute Disease , Collagen/metabolism , Humans , Prognosis , Sensitivity and Specificity , Surgical Wound Dehiscence/prevention & control , Tensile Strength , Time Factors
8.
Burns ; 25(5): 431-7, 1999 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10439152

ABSTRACT

The Balanced Scorecard provides a model that can be adapted to the management of any burn center, burn service or burn program. This model enables an organization to translate its mission and vision into specific strategic objectives across the four perspective: (1) the financial perspective; (2) the customer service perspective; (3) the internal business perspective; and (4) the growth and learning perspective. Once the appropriate objectives are identified, the Balanced Scorecard guides the organization to develop reasonable performance measures and establishes targets, initiatives and alternatives to meet programmatic goals and pursue longer-term visionary improvements. We used the burn center at the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center to test whether the Balanced Scorecard methodology was appropriate for the core business plan of a healthcare strategic business unit (i.e. a burn center).


Subject(s)
Burn Units/organization & administration , Burn Units/economics
10.
Crit Care Nurs Q ; 17(2): 34-50, 1994 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8055359

ABSTRACT

Patients with significant abdominal trauma and polytrauma patients with less severe abdominal injuries require critical care management. The diagnostic skills used for the initial evaluation of the injured abdomen are used to determine whether celiotomy is required and to evaluate the postoperative abdomen for missed injury or early detection for complications. The critical care nurse must identify life-threatening abdominal injuries immediately and all abdominal injuries in a timely fashion through consideration of the mechanism of injury and a combination of history, physical examination, and diagnostic tests. All facets of the critical care management of abdominal trauma must be familiar to the critical care nurse in order to recognize abdominal injuries and lower the frequency of preventable death after trauma.


Subject(s)
Abdominal Injuries/nursing , Abdominal Injuries/therapy , Critical Care , Wounds, Nonpenetrating/therapy , Wounds, Penetrating/therapy , Algorithms , Clinical Laboratory Techniques , Diagnostic Imaging , Humans , Medical History Taking , Peritoneal Lavage , Physical Examination , Postoperative Care
11.
J Trauma ; 36(2): 252-4, 1994 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8114147

ABSTRACT

Venovenous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation and carbon dioxide removal was utilized to support a patient with traumatic bronchial disruption and associated injuries. With use of surface-heparinized perfusion equipment, low levels of anticoagulation were maintained allowing surgical repair of the bronchial injury and recovery from acute respiratory failure without significant hemorrhage.


Subject(s)
Bronchi/injuries , Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation/methods , Respiratory Distress Syndrome/therapy , Adolescent , Bronchi/surgery , Cardiopulmonary Bypass , Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation/instrumentation , Female , Humans , Respiratory Distress Syndrome/complications
12.
J Burn Care Rehabil ; 12(6): 516-20, 1991.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1779004

ABSTRACT

Liquid propane causes a severe, deep thermal injury in unprotected tissue. Delayed surgical intervention, as for thermal burns, has been the gold standard of treatment. An animal model of liquid-propane injury was devised to document injury, to demonstrate a better method of protection, and to define an appropriate management protocol. Twenty-eight rats were classified into four groups: unprotected tissue (n = 8), skin covered with wool (n = 8), skin covered with Neoprene (Wm. H. Horn & Brothers Inc., Philadelphia, Pa.) (n = 8), and skin covered with wool plus Neoprene (n = 4). Each group was subdivided into two exposure times: 6 seconds and 30 seconds. The mean temperatures +/- standard error of the mean of the various tissue levels initially and at 6 and 30 seconds of exposure were determined. Histologic examination demonstrated that full-thickness tissue necrosis occurred in unprotected and wool-covered tissue. Areas that were covered with Neoprene showed intact skin and subcutaneous tissue with underlying muscle necrosis. Examination of the tissue that was covered with wool plus Neoprene showed no histologic damage. There was no sign of tissue regeneration at the wound periphery, and there was no histologic difference in any group, whether the examination took place at 1 or 5 days after injury. This study demonstrated that the best form of protection appears to be a wool glove liner covered with a Neoprene glove. The histologic evidence suggests that a liquid-propane injury to unprotected tissue should be managed aggressively with early excision and grafting.


Subject(s)
Frostbite/chemically induced , Propane , Protective Clothing , Animals , Freezing , Frostbite/prevention & control , Frostbite/surgery , Hindlimb/injuries , Male , Neoprene , Rats , Rats, Inbred Strains , Wool
13.
J Burn Care Rehabil ; 12(2): 136-9, 1991.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2050720

ABSTRACT

Exposure of skin to liquid propane causes a severe freeze injury. This cutaneous injury has the appearance of a partial-thickness thermal injury of indeterminate depth, but the deep tissue damage is greater than is at first apparent. A case history is presented that illustrates the severity of this particular mechanism of injury and the need for adequate safety precautions.


Subject(s)
Burns, Chemical/etiology , Propane/adverse effects , Accidents, Occupational/prevention & control , Accidents, Occupational/statistics & numerical data , Amputation, Surgical , Burns, Chemical/pathology , Debridement , Freezing , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Necrosis , Skin Transplantation
15.
J Burn Care Rehabil ; 10(6): 561-7, 1989.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2600109

ABSTRACT

The supplement on burns by the National Disaster Medical System (NDMS) requires an evaluation of burn centers' and burn hospitals' capabilities for treating seriously burned victims. The American Burn Association (ABA) and its members, as experts in burn care, should take the lead in working with local, state, and federal disaster planners. Proposals based on standards adopted by the ABA support classification of facilities (levels I, II, III), identify minimum and maximum bed availability, require minimum training for personnel (e.g., ABLS), and encourage enrollment of all burn centers and burn hospitals as contract hospitals in the National Disaster Medical System. Periodically, the ABA should verify that the burn care facilities identified in the disaster plan meet its standards. Once the burn disaster system is developed, drills should be held locally on a regular basis and nationally on an annual basis.


Subject(s)
Burn Units/supply & distribution , Burns , Disaster Planning , Fires , Intensive Care Units/supply & distribution , National Health Programs/organization & administration , Regional Health Planning/organization & administration , Humans , Organizations , United States
17.
Postgrad Med ; 85(1): 178-83, 186-93, 196, 1989 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2911538

ABSTRACT

Patients with major burns should be transported by whatever conveyance seems appropriate to a facility capable of caring for such injuries. At the scene of the accident and en route to the hospital, adherence to standard principles of trauma care allows optimal resuscitation. Once rescuers have assessed the depth and extent of burns and conferred with hospital personnel, they need to do relatively little in the way of initial wound treatment except to prevent further injury and decrease pain. Careful, concise documentation is necessary to assure a continuum of good patient care.


Subject(s)
Burns/therapy , Emergency Medical Services , Burns/classification , Burns/pathology , Burns, Inhalation/diagnosis , Burns, Inhalation/therapy , Humans , Resuscitation , Transportation of Patients
18.
J Trauma ; 28(4): 435-40, 1988 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3352005

ABSTRACT

Since the initial hour after injury is the most crucial time for trauma patients, resuscitation technique is of vital importance. Standardized courses for first-hour management (ATLAS) have been widely accepted. A teaching format based upon video recording of every resuscitation has been developed. Tapes are reviewed by the staff and by the individuals involved in a particular resuscitation. In a weekly resuscitation review conference, actual footage is presented to the trauma team members, specific aspects of a resuscitation are critiqued, and supplemental didactic information is presented. Legal problems have been avoided by making the review and conference a part of the quality assurance process. Patient anonymity is preserved by positioning the video camera at the foot of the resuscitation bed. Tapes are erased after each conference. Video recording allows analysis of: 1) priorities during the resuscitation; 2) cognitive integration of the workup by the team leader; 3) physical integration of the workup by the team leader; 4) team member adherence to assigned responsibilities, resuscitation time, errors or breaks in technique; and 5) behavior change over time. In 3 1/2 years, more than 2,500 resuscitations have been recorded. Over a 3-month period, average resuscitation time to definitive care decreased for age- and injury severity-matched patient groups cared for by one team. Resuscitations have become more efficient and adherence to assigned responsibilities better. Weekly review of resuscitation contributes to improved technique and trauma care.


Subject(s)
Emergency Medicine/education , Personnel, Hospital/education , Resuscitation , Videotape Recording , Wounds and Injuries/therapy , Critical Care/education , Education, Continuing , Humans , Quality Assurance, Health Care , Teaching/methods
19.
J Burn Care Rehabil ; 9(2): 165-8, 1988.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3129436

ABSTRACT

Using computer-drafted pressure support gloves during a six-month period, we greatly increased our accuracy of fit. Only eight alterations were required out of 214 gloves manufactured, and none of the alterations was due to computer error. Our time to calculate and lay out patterns decreased by a 4:1 ratio, thus reducing a two-hour time period to one-half hour per glove. The cost of hardware and software was offset by reduced labor costs over a period of approximately eight months. Use of the computer was cost effective, produced error-free patterns, and allowed better control of pattern consistency.


Subject(s)
Burns/therapy , Clothing , Hand Injuries/therapy , Clothing/economics , Cost-Benefit Analysis , Equipment Design , Humans , Pressure , Software/economics
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