Publications by authors named "Emmy Muller-Sloof"

Article Synopsis
  • Surgical wound dehiscence (SWD) lacks a consistent definition across healthcare literature, making diagnosis and treatment challenging.
  • A scoping review analyzed 34 articles to identify how SWD is defined and to assess the use of a 2018 consensus definition by the World Union of Wound Healing Societies (WUWHS).
  • Results revealed significant variation in SWD definitions among studies, with very few referencing the WUWHS definition, highlighting the need for standardized terminology to enhance patient care.
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Background: Surgical wound dehiscence (SWD) has various definitions, which complicates accurate and uniform diagnosis. To address this, the World Union Wound Healing Societies (WUWHS) presented a consensus based definition and classification for SWD (2018).

Aim: This quasi-experimental pretest-posttest study investigates the inter-rater reliability among healthcare professionals (HCP) and wound care professionals (WCP) when assessing wound photos on the presence or absence of SWD before and after training on the WUWHS-definition.

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Background: In breast reconstruction operations, surgical wound dehiscence is a serious complication that generates a significant burden on patients and health care systems. There are indications that postoperative treatment with closed-incision negative-pressure therapy has been associated with reduced wound dehiscence rates. This randomized clinical trial examines the effect of closed-incision negative-pressure application on abdominal donor-site surgical wound dehiscence in low- and high-risk patients undergoing breast reconstruction with a deep inferior epigastric perforator flap.

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