The early management of pediatric hand burns includes surgical treatment, medical follow up and prevention of abnormal scarring by splits and/or pressure garment therapy. The aim of this review was to find the best available evidence in the literature on the surgical part of this management. This review started with a search in the PubMed database for the keywords, hand AND/OR child AND/OR burn.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report the results of a retrospective study of 47 adult patients corresponding to 54 fingers, operated on in the emergency room at Nancy University Hospital between December 1996 and October 1998. These patients were managed using three different postoperative therapy protocols: passive mobilisation according to the Duran technique, active-passive mobilisation according to the Kleinert technique and immediate active mobilisation as described by Strickland. Patients were evaluated in three different ways; active range of movement obtained according to the Strickland scale, the "400 points" flexor function test and the delay in returning to work.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRev Epidemiol Sante Publique
June 2001
Background: Many measurement instruments, particularly measures of hand functional ability, frequently comprise a large number of items. Reduced versions of these instruments can facilitate their use. This work proposes a new method for shortening an instrument.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRev Epidemiol Sante Publique
June 1996
The construction of an instrument including a number of tests requires an analysis of its structure and its unidimensionality (which allows calculation of global score), and the determination of the difficulty level of various tests. This study examined a tool including 67 tests designed to evaluate the functional ability of patients with an injured upper limb. The patients seen in a rehabilitation centre during 12 months (173 subjects) were evaluated by the occupational therapists familiar with the tool.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis study compared the personality self-representations of 288 hand injured patients with those of 959 young people (15-25 years old) randomly selected from the general population (noted GP), and with those of 336 unemployed people of all ages in professional training (U) in Lorraine (north-eastern France). The relationship between patients' personality self-representations and injury was also investigated. Personality self-representations included 14 questions: in your own opinion are you sociable?, at ease with others?, serious?, careful?, dynamic?, optimistic?, worried?, irritable?, clumsy?, solitary?, organised?, ambitious?, do you have a sense of responsibility?, and many plans? The patients had similar self-representations to GP except for the items non clumsy (odds ratio adjusted on age and sex OR = 2.
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