AI Article Synopsis

  • Paediatric second-degree burns present serious medical challenges, and various treatment options exist, prompting a review to compare their effectiveness against silver sulphadiazine (SSD).
  • The study analyzed 29 randomized controlled trials focusing on key outcomes like healing time, infection rates, and length of hospital stays, with some dressings showing improved results over SSD.
  • Findings highlighted variability among studies due to differences in burn severity and area, leading to inconclusive results on the best treatment, indicating a need for further research.

Article Abstract

Background: Paediatric second-degree burn injuries are a significant source of medical challenges to the population that may cause severe, lifelong complications. Currently, there are dozens of therapeutic modalities and we aimed to summarise their reported outcomes and determine their effectiveness, compared to the widely used silver sulphadiazine (SSD).

Methods: We conducted the meta-analysis and systematic review of randomised controlled trials (RCTs), which investigated the performance of dressings in acute paediatric partial-thickness burns. The evaluated endpoints were time until wound closure, grafting and infection rate, number of dressing changes and length of hospitalisation.

Results: Twenty-nine RCTs were included in the qualitative and 25 in the quantitative synthesis, but only three trials compared SSD directly to the same intervention (Biobrane). Data analysis showed a tendency for faster healing times and a reduced complication rate linked to biosynthetic, silver foam and amnion membrane dressings. A substantial difference was found between the number of dressing changes associated with less pain, narcosis and treatment duration.

Conclusions: Considerable between-study heterogeneity was caused by the unequal depth subcategory ratio and surface area of the injuries; therefore, no significant difference was found in the main outcomes. Further research is necessary to establish the most effective treatment for these burns.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9144506PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/life12050619DOI Listing

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