Burns : journal of the International Society for Burn Injuries
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Frostbite is a severe thermal injury, which characterized by tissue necrosis with a high percentage of amputations, disability of patients. ⋯ The defining moments in the treatment of deep frostbite are timely diagnosis and complex treatment. With late admission surgical treatment, including reconstructive skin plastic surgery, becomes important.
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Autologous split thickness skin grafting is the standard-of-care for the majority of deep dermal and full thickness burns: Meshed grafting is most commonly used. Patients with extensive burn injuries have limited donor site availability. Meek micrografting is a well-known technique to enable larger expansions. A review was conducted on the outcomes of the Meek micrograft technique. ⋯ Overall poor study quality and the specific lack of data on scar quality, made it impossible to draw conclusions on the outcomes of Meek micrografting. A randomized controlled trial is required to further investigate the performance of the Meek micrograft technique.
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Wound infection following burn injury can be clinically challenging to manage. Its presence in a thermally compromised patient can detrimentally affect the ability of the wound to heal leading not only to wound progression but ultimately contribute to a large part of the economic health burden expenditure in the National Health Service. Despite meticulous wound care and infection control measures the colonisation of burn wounds by bacterial pathogens has and continues to be the case. There has been a growing interest in the use of antimicrobial applications when managing localised burn wound infections due to a constantly increasing number of antibiotic-resistant organisms. ⋯ We identified a significant difference in the UK burns services' approach to pseudomonas burn wound infections. Our literature review demonstrates that a daily dressing regime of 2.5-3% acetic acid is a well-tolerated treatment regime in burn patients and that it is in use in UK burns services. There are no current randomised controlled trials that evaluate the usage of acetic acid. The variation in usage suggests that there is scope for further study in order to develop evidence to generate a UK wide approach based on national standardised guidelines.
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As burn self-stigma has not been addressed fully, the purpose of current study is to analyze dimensions of the concept using literature and lived experiences in burn survivors. ⋯ Burn self-stigma is a state in which burn survivors experience unfavorable thoughts and feelings about themselves as a result of society's misconceptions about them. They give emotional and behavioral responses that define them in a negative way. In the end, the burn survivor's individual, familial, and social dimensions are significantly impacted.