British journal of plastic surgery
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Adhesive retention dressings are more comfortable than alginate dressings on split-skin-graft donor sites.
Painful split-skin-graft donor sites remain a common problem for patients. We undertook a prospective randomised trial to examine the comparative comfort and ease of care of two different donor-site dressings. One dressing is the alginate Kaltostat, the standard plastic-surgical dressing in the UK and abroad, and the other is the adhesive retention tape Mefix, a novel use of a readily available dressing. ⋯ Dressings were assessed by interview and questionnaire at 24, 72 h and 2 weeks, and by wound review at 2 weeks. Retention dressings were found to be more comfortable, required less nursing intervention and allowed patients easier mobility with a greater range of daily activities, especially washing, without compromising wound healing. We recommend adhesive retention dressings as cost-effective comfortable dressings, which readily conform to any donor site.
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Preoperative chemotherapy (PCT) can be used in large primary breast cancer to facilitate breast conservative surgery (BCS). Cosmetic results of BCS are influenced by the size of the residual tumour, relative to the size of the breast. After mastectomy, immediate breast reconstruction (IBR) with autologous tissue provides excellent cosmetic outcome and has proven to be safe in breast cancer patients. ⋯ The mean score was 7.5/10 for IBR, versus 6.0/10 for BCS (p<0.0001). Breast conserving treatment or mastectomy with reconstruction may yield comparable results of QoL, but cosmetic outcome is better after SSM and perforator-flap reconstruction. Patients must be offered both options, and clinicians should stress that both are equally effective.
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Pedicled TRAM flap surgery is a complex procedure characterised by an extensive wound site. We present two patients with efficient postoperative pain relief by continuous wound instillation of ropivacaine 0.2% via two multilumen catheters. The catheters were placed subcutaneously before the wound closure through the umbilicus into the abdominal wound, and under the autologous flap into the breast. ⋯ Pain scores at rest and on coughing were low on the first postoperative day, and later zero. No medication for breakthrough pain was required throughout the recovery period, and the patients experienced no adverse events linked to the analgesia scene. Patient satisfaction was excellent, and quality of recovery score was superior.