18 results match your criteria: "Amsterdam Movement Sciences (AMS) Institute[Affiliation]"

The prevalence and predictors of reconstructive surgery in pediatric burn care.

Burns

December 2024

Association of Dutch Burn Centers, Burn Center, Red Cross Hospital, Beverwijk, the Netherlands; Department of Plastic, Reconstructive and Hand Surgery, Amsterdam UMC, Location VU University Amsterdam, De Boelelaan 1117, Amsterdam, the Netherlands. Electronic address:

Objective: This study aimed to examine the prevalence and predictors of reconstructive surgery among pediatric burn patients in the Netherlands.

Methods: Pediatric burn patients were identified through the Dutch Burn Repository R3. Eligibility criteria included a burn requiring hospital admission or surgical treatment at one of the Dutch burn centers in 2009-2019.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study focused on how doctors use a treatment called intralesional corticosteroid administration (ICA) for keloids, which are raised scars.
  • A group of 23 keloid experts worked together online to agree on the best methods for using this treatment to help improve results.
  • They reached agreements on some practices but didn’t all agree on the exact dosage and other details, highlighting the need for clearer treatment guidelines.
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Development of a value-based healthcare burns core set for adult burn care.

Burns

September 2024

Amsterdam UMC location Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Department of Plastic, Reconstructive and Hand Surgery, Amsterdam, the Netherlands; Burn Centre, Red Cross Hospital, Beverwijk, the Netherlands; Amsterdam Movement Sciences (AMS) Institute, Amsterdam UMC, Amsterdam, the Netherlands; Amsterdam UMC location University of Amsterdam, Pediatric Surgical Centre, Emma Children's Hospital, Amsterdam, the Netherlands; Department of Plastic, Reconstructive and Hand Surgery, Red Cross Hospital, Beverwijk, the Netherlands.

Background: Value-based healthcare (VBHC) is increasingly implemented in healthcare worldwide. Transparent measurement of the outcomes most important and relevant to patients is essential in VBHC, which is supported by a core set of most important quality indicators and outcomes. Therefore, the aim of this study was to develop a VBHC-burns core set for adult burn patients.

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An in silico modeling approach to understanding the dynamics of the post-burn immune response.

Front Immunol

February 2024

Department of Plastic, Reconstructive and Hand Surgery, Amsterdam Movement Sciences (AMS) Institute, Amsterdam University Medical Center (UMC), Location VUmc, Amsterdam, Netherlands.

Introduction: Burns are characterized by a massive and prolonged acute inflammation, which persists for up to months after the initial trauma. Due to the complexity of the inflammatory process, Predicting the dynamics of wound healing process can be challenging for burn injuries. The aim of this study was to develop simulation models for the post-burn immune response based on (pre)clinical data.

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Uniaxial mechanical stretch properties correlated with three-dimensional microstructure of human dermal skin.

Biomech Model Mechanobiol

June 2024

Faculty of Science, Department of Physics, Laserlab, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, De Boelelaan 1105, 1081HV, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

The intact and healthy skin forms a barrier to the outside world and protects the body from mechanical impact. The skin is a complex structure with unique mechano-elastic properties. To better direct the design of biomimetic materials and induce skin regeneration in wounds with optimal outcome, more insight is required in how the mechano-elastic properties emerge from the skin's main constituents, collagen and elastin fibers.

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Background: The use of patient-reported outcomes to improve burn care increases. Little is known on burn patients' views on what outcomes are most important, and about preferences regarding online Patient Reported Outcome Measures (PROMs). Therefore, this study assessed what outcomes matter most to patients, and gained insights into patient preferences towards the use of online PROMs.

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Scars.

Nat Rev Dis Primers

November 2023

Department of Dermatology and Allergy, Ludwig-Maximilian University Munich, Munich, Germany.

Wound healing occurs as a response to disruption of the epidermis and dermis. It is an intricate and well-orchestrated response with the goal to restore skin integrity and function. However, in hundreds of millions of patients, skin wound healing results in abnormal scarring, including keloid lesions or hypertrophic scarring.

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Short- and Long-term Outcomes of an Acellular Dermal Substitute versus Standard of Care in Burns and Reconstructions: A Phase I/II Intrapatient Randomized Controlled Trial.

Adv Skin Wound Care

October 2023

Kim L. M. Gardien, MD, is Burn Physician and Anouk Pijpe, PhD, is Epidemiologist and Research Coordinator, Association of Dutch Burn Centres, Beverwijk, the Netherlands; Burn Center, Red Cross Hospital, Beverwijk; Department of Plastic, Reconstructive and Hand Surgery, Amsterdam UMC, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam; and Amsterdam Movement Sciences (AMS) Institute, Amsterdam UMC. Katrien M. Brouwer, PhD, is Senior Researcher, Association of Dutch Burn Centres. Matthea Stoop, RN, is Research Nurse, Association of Dutch Burn Centres; Burn Center, Red Cross Hospital, Beverwijk; Department of Plastic, Reconstructive and Hand Surgery, Amsterdam UMC, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam. Simarjeet K. Singh is Research Student, Burn Center, Red Cross Hospital, Beverwijk. Floyd W. Timmermans, MD, PhD, is Clinical Researcher, Department of Plastic, Reconstructive and Hand Surgery, Amsterdam UMC, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam; and AMS Institute, Amsterdam UMC. Marcel Vlig, BAS, is Senior Technician, Association of Dutch Burn Centres. Paul P. M. van Zuijlen, MD, PhD, is Plastic Surgeon and Professor of Burn Care, Burn Center, Red Cross Hospital, Beverwijk; Department of Plastic, Reconstructive and Hand Surgery, Amsterdam UMC, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam; AMS Institute, Amsterdam UMC; and Department of Plastic, Reconstructive and Hand Surgery, Red Cross Hospital, Beverwijk. Esther Middelkoop, PhD, is Director of Research and Professor of Wound Healing and Skin Regeneration, Association of Dutch Burn Centres, Beverwijk, the Netherlands; Burn Center, Red Cross Hospital, Beverwijk; Department of Plastic, Reconstructive and Hand Surgery, Amsterdam UMC, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam; and AMS Institute, Amsterdam UMC.

Objective: Dermal substitutes promote dermal regeneration and improve scar quality, but knowledge gaps remain regarding their efficacy and indications for use. The authors investigated the safety and short- and long-term efficacy of an acellular dermal substitute in patients with full-thickness wounds.

Methods: This intrapatient randomized controlled, open-label, phase I (safety) and phase II (efficacy) study compared treatment with Novomaix (Matricel GmbH), a dermal collagen/elastin-based scaffold, with split-thickness skin graft (STSG) only.

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Background: Several therapeutic options are available for the treatment of keloids, but it remains unclear which treatment options are most commonly used by practitioners.

Objective: To explore the prevailing treatment for different keloid phenotypes among dermatologists and plastic surgeons in the Netherlands.

Methods: Members of the Dutch society for Plastic surgery and the Dutch society for Dermatology and Venereology were asked to participate.

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Burn injury induces a complex inflammatory response, both locally and systemically, and is not yet completely unravelled and understood. In order to enable the development of accurate treatment options, it is of paramount importance to fully understand post-burn immunology. Research in the last decades describes insights into the prolonged and excessive inflammatory response that could exist after both severe and milder burn trauma and that this response differs from that of none-burn acute trauma.

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Background: Intralesional corticosteroid administration (ICA) is a first-line treatment for keloids. However, its clinical results are still highly variable and often suboptimal. Treatment results may strongly be influenced by various operator-dependent factors.

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The JAK-STAT pathway in keloid pathogenesis: a systematic review with qualitative synthesis.

Exp Dermatol

May 2023

Department of Molecular Cell Biology and Immunology, Amsterdam institute for Infection and Immunity (AII), Amsterdam UMC, Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

Keloid tissues contain inflammatory cells and upregulated pro-inflammatory cytokines. The Janus kinase (JAK)-signal transducer and activator of transcription (STAT) pathway mediate cellular responses to these cytokines. We performed a systematic review on the role of the JAK-STAT pathway in keloid pathogenesis and the evidence for JAK-STAT inhibitors in keloid treatment.

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Background: The population of elderly patients with burn injuries is growing. Insight into long-term mortality rates of elderly after burn injury and predictors affecting outcome is limited. This study aimed to provide this information.

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Background: Intralesional corticosteroid administration (ICA) is a first-line therapy in keloid treatment. However, its clinical results are still highly variable and often suboptimal. Treatment results may strongly be influenced by various ways of ICA.

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The systemic and local immune response in burn patients is often extreme and derailed. As excessive inflammation can damage healthy tissues and slow down the healing process, modulation of inflammatory responses could limit complications and improve recovery. Due to its complexity, more detailed information on the immune effects of thermal injury is needed to improve patient outcomes.

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Health care is undergoing a profound technological and digital transformation and has become increasingly complex. It is important for burns professionals and researchers to adapt to these developments which may require new ways of thinking and subsequent new strategies. As Einstein has put it: "We must learn to see the world anew.

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A burn wound is a complex systemic disease at multiple levels. Current knowledge of scar formation after burn injury has come from traditional biological and clinical studies. These are normally focused on just a small part of the entire process, which has limited our ability to sufficiently understand the underlying mechanisms and to predict systems behaviour.

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Background: Spike trains of multiple neurons can be analyzed following the summed population (SP) or the labeled line (LL) hypothesis. Responses to external stimuli are generated by a neuronal population as a whole or the individual neurons have encoding capacities of their own. The SPIKE-distance estimated either for a single, pooled spike train over a population or for each neuron separately can serve to quantify these responses.

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