Autor: |
Glat, Paul, Quirk, Lisa, Hultman, Scott, Kesey, Jennifer, Jain, Arpana, Griswald, John, Natalie, Fitzgerald, Wibbenmeyer, Lucy, Amani, Hamed, Cramer, Caryn, Hickerson, William L |
Předmět: |
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Zdroj: |
Journal of Burn Care & Research; Sep/Oct2024, Vol. 45 Issue 5, p1287-1293, 7p |
Abstrakt: |
The goal of this study was to inform standards of best practice in the use of cultured epidermal autograft (CEA), manufactured in the United States, for the treatment of patients with severe burns. The study was designed using the modified Delphi technique, a method for structuring group communication among experts to promote the development of consensus-based recommendations. Known areas of variability related to the stages of CEA treatment were identified by literature review prior to the study and were confirmed through qualitative interview with the experts. The areas included Preoperative Planning/Surgical Planning, Immediate Postoperative Care, and Rehabilitation and Long-Term Care. A list of 22 questions was developed based on interviews with the experts, and a 3-round Delphi technique was used to establish consensus (≥80% agreement). Following 3 rounds (quantitative, qualitative, and virtual roundtable meeting) of the Delphi study, important guidance for the use of CEA treatment in severely burned patients gained consensus. Final key recommendations included minimum burn limit for CEA treatment (30%-50% TBSA), ideal biopsy timing (1-2 days), number of grafts (enough to cover; adjust 72 hours before application), use of dermal substrates (recommended) and wide meshed autograft underlay (recommended), optimal CEA drying time per day (open air >6 hours), slings used if CEA placed on extremities (recommended), dressing changes (performed every day, all at once, with all layers removed down to bridal veil), CEA backing removal (10-14 days after placement), heat lamps (can be used to aid the wound in drying, depending on clinical judgment), initial activity restrictions lifted (beginning 10 days after backing removal), compression garments (introduced at approximately 2 months post-CEA surgery), and lasers (CO2 laser can be introduced between 3 and 6 months post-CEA surgery). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |
Databáze: |
Complementary Index |
Externí odkaz: |
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