Annals of plastic surgery
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Annals of plastic surgery · Apr 2011
Diagnostic value and cost-effectiveness of good quality digital images accompanying electronic referrals for suspected skin malignancies.
The aim of this study was to investigate the outcome and cost-effectiveness of good and poor quality photographs accompanying the electronic referrals for suspected skin malignancies. ⋯ Good quality images are more accurate than poor quality images in triaging of patients, and thus more effective in facilitating the treatment of malignant lesions timely. Good quality photographs allow a delayed appropriate treatment of benign lesions. This increases the safety for patients in a queue in a rationed health care system, and improves patient flow.
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Annals of plastic surgery · Apr 2011
ReviewIschemic optic neuropathy and implications for plastic surgeons: report of a new case and review of the literature.
Postoperative visual loss is a rare and devastating complication after nonocular as well as ocular surgery. A case of such a complication arising as a consequence of nonocular surgery prompted a review of the literature, and an appraisal of current theories on etiology, risk factors, and potential treatment options, as well as implications for informed consent. It is clear from our review that all patients undergoing both reconstructive and cosmetic surgery are at risk. ⋯ Ischemic optic neuropathy can be a devastating complication of surgery. Plastic surgeons need to be aware of the risks, as well as the signs and symptoms, and counsel at-risk patients accordingly because of the potentially devastating nature of this complication. There are significant implications in relation to informed consent, underscored by the legal case of Rogers v Whitaker, 67 ALJR 47 (Aust 1992), which highlights the importance within the consent process of complications threatening sight, no matter how small.
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Self-immolation constitutes a rare form of suicide in developed countries, though it accounts for unique injury characteristics in the burn intensive care unit. The aim of this study was to present the epidemiological and clinical features of patients burned during a suicidal attempt seen in a North Rhine-Westphalia burn intensive care unit (BICU). To address this aim, we undertook a 21-year retrospective study involving patients with thermal injuries admitted to the largest burn unit in Germany. ⋯ The suicidal group had a larger extent of burns, higher incidence of inhalation injury, required more surgical procedures, catecholamines, blood transfusions, and a longer BICU stay. Their clinical course was complicated by prolonged intubation period, higher rate of multiple drug-resistant bacteria acquisition and sepsis, leading to a higher mortality rate. Although the proportion of self-immolation victims among all burned patients is not high, the markedly higher severity of their burns and their poorer quality of outcomes makes them an important clinical subgroup for further study.