We need central venous catheters (CVCs) in management of critically ill patients with severe burns, either for the administration of fluids or monitoring hemodynamic status. Central venous catheterization may cause different early or late complications, which depend on the physician's erudition, the quality of the catheters and quality of Intensive Care Unit (ICU) nursing care for insertion. 272 CVCs were inserted in 114 both adult and pediatric patients from 2004 to 2006 in the ICU of the Burn Centre in Ostrava.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Chir Plast
November 2006
Integra artificial skin was applied on 16% of TBSA after necrectomy on a 7-month-old girl who was scalded on 26% of TBSA by her mother when she was cooking goulash. Nutritional parameters were monitored during the period of 25 days from the 1st necrectomy and application of Integra up to the first autotransplantation--in the period when the other burnt surfaces were almost healed. The average intake of proteins and energy to achieve normal levels of monitored nutritional parameters was lower than that recommended by calculations for similarly burnt children.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMorykwas and Argenta developed Vacuum Assisted Closure (VAC) in the early 90s for the treatment of tissue defects. In 2004, for the first time at our workplace, we used this method in the treatment of six patients between 54 and 91 years of age. Two of the patients were treated for a varicose ulcer on a lower extremity, two patients for loss of skin after an inflammation secondary to infection, one high-risk patient for deep burns, and one patient for a deep defect caused by an inappropriate medical care.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe authors have analyzed the data files of 580 child patients up to 15 years of age who were hospitalized at the Burn Center of the FNsP Hospital in Ostrava in the years 1999 - 2003. The authors focused on mechanisms of burn injury in relation to the age of a child as well as extent, depth, localization, and local treatment of the injury. The data file was divided to four age groups: up to two years of age, 2 - 5 years of age, 5 - 10 years of age, and 10 - 15 years of age.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElectrical burns are a serious problem within burn medicine even though they are relatively uncommon. The size of the burn is small, but the wound is often deep, and frequently the patient has systemic complications as well. In the majority of patients with such injuries immediate surgical intervention is essential, consisting of escharotomy, fasciotomy, and debridement of the devitalized tissues, necrectomy of the burn area, and closure of the defect by a direct suture, a dermo-epidermal graft, or local flap.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF