4 results match your criteria: "Plastic- and Hand Surgery - University of Heidelberg[Affiliation]"
Microsurgery
July 2016
Department of Hand- Plastic- and Reconstructive Surgery, Burn Center, BG Trauma Center Ludwigshafen, Plastic- and Hand Surgery-University of Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany.
Background: VCA offers a potential treatment for extensive tissue defects. First results of systemic administration of Mitomycin C-treated PBMCs in VCA demonstrated a significant prolongation of allograft survival. The aim of this study is to evaluate if local administration of MMC-PBMCs prolongs allograft survival in allogeneic hind limb transplantations of the rat.
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February 2016
Department of Hand-, Plastic- and Reconstructive Surgery, Burn Center, BG Trauma Center Ludwigshafen, Plastic- and Hand Surgery - University of Heidelberg, Germany. Electronic address:
Background: Bioethanol-fueled fireplaces are popular interior home decoration accessories. Although their safety is promoted frequently, actual presentations of severe burn injuries in our burn intensive care unit (ICU) have focused the authors on safety problems with these devices. In this article we want to explore the mechanisms for these accidents and state our experiences with this increasingly relevant risk for severe burn injuries.
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February 2005
Department of Hand-, Plastic- and Reconstructive Surgery, Burn Center -- BG Trauma Center Ludwigshafen, Plastic- and Hand Surgery -- University of Heidelberg, Ludwig-Guttmannstr. 13, 67071 Ludwigshafen, Germany.
Free tissue transplantation is a rarely indicated procedure in burn reconstruction. As the versatility and variability of free flaps have significantly developed during recent years, so have the indications for this procedure expanded. This study reports retrospectively the results of 75 free flaps in 60 severely burned patients using 20 different free flaps.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Hand Surg Br
June 2003
Department for Hand, Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Burn Centre, Plastic and Hand Surgery University of Heidelberg, BG--Trauma Centre, Ludwigshafen, Germany.
This retrospective study evaluates a dynamic active motion protocol for extensor tendon repairs in zones V to VII. Fifty-eight patients with 87 extensor tendon injuries were examined. Using Geldmacher's and Kleinert and Verdan's evaluation systems, the results were graded as "excellent" and "good" in more than 94%, and as "satisfactory" in the remainder.
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