The Journal of burn care & rehabilitation
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The research literature suggests but does not test the hypothesis that differential factors determine when a patient will return to work after serious burn injury. In this study, factors influencing time before return to work after serious burn injury were investigated prospectively as part of a large burn research project. Sixty-five patients with burns who had returned to work were followed. ⋯ Sufficient data were available to develop a regression equation to specifically predict time before return to work. The data presented here are useful in informing patients, families, employers, and health-funding agencies as to the probable delay before return to work that can be expected after serious burn injury. In particular, predictability refinements are possible with the regression equation developed in this study.
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J Burn Care Rehabil · Jan 1992
Case ReportsPreliminary experience with cultured epidermal autograft in a community hospital burn unit.
Initial experience with cultured epidermal autograft (CEA) in a community hospital burn unit is described. Five applications of CEA to three patients (mean burn size, 59% total body surface area) were made. Final graft "take" of CEA ranged from 10% to 80%. ⋯ CEA is more sensitive to infection than meshed autograft. A review of the literature concerning topical antibiotic use with CEA is included. This experience with CEA demonstrates that large burns can be successfully managed with this modality in a community hospital burn unit setting.
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For many years, burn professionals have attempted to assess the outcomes of different types of burn injury and the factors that are related to good patterns of coping with the aftermath of thermal injury. Most writers have attempted to use objective criteria such as return to work or preexisting psychologic problems (e.g., alcoholism) in determining the success of rehabilitation, but much controversy over the forms of assessment persists. ⋯ The use of denial, the ways in which hostility is managed by the patient, and how he or she uses key persons in the environment are examined. The cognitive, emotional (affective), and behavioral styles of patients are examined as part of this pilot study of cluster patterns or types of adjustment.
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J Burn Care Rehabil · Jan 1992
Case ReportsBurns are different: the child psychiatrist on the pediatric burns ward.
This article is written from the dual perspective of a child psychiatrist, consultant to a burn unit, who also happens to have suffered burns to his hands and face as the result of a car accident in 1976. One of its central themes is that burns are different from other surgical conditions. The role of the child psychiatrist as a consultant to a pediatric burn unit is explored and illustrated with clinical vignettes.
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J Burn Care Rehabil · Jan 1992
Cultured epidermal autograft and the treatment of the massive burn injury.
As a rule, adult and pediatric patients with thermal injuries that involve more than 90% total body surface area (TBSA) burn have poor prognoses. Even for patients who are 5 to 34 years old with a 70% TBSA burn, the mortality rate is 80%. Lack of autologous donor skin, which is essential for permanent wound closure, is the major problem. ⋯ CEA take is best on early granulation tissue or freshly excised wounds. Early excision of burn eschar, temporary wound closure with cadaveric allograft and Biobrane (Winthrop Pharmaceuticals, Wound Care Div., Fountain Valley, Calif.), and permanent closure with CEA may improve survival rates among patients with massive burn wounds. CEA is a tremendous asset to the management of massive burn injuries.