Hydrosurgical Debridement Allows Effective Wound Bed Preparation of Pressure Injuries: A Prospective Case Series
Background:. Pressure injuries (PIs) are common in hospitalized patients, with incidence exceeding 50% in high-risk patients. Immobilization causes a prolonged compression of vascular networks in tissues overlying bony prominences, leading to ischemia and ulceration. Traditionally, PIs are treated w...
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doaj-41031eef724242488780f841956debb32020-11-25T02:48:20ZengWolters KluwerPlastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Global Open2169-75742020-06-0186e292110.1097/GOX.0000000000002921202006000-00033Hydrosurgical Debridement Allows Effective Wound Bed Preparation of Pressure Injuries: A Prospective Case SeriesHajime Matsumine, MD, PhD0Giorgio Giatsidis, MD, PhD1Mika Takagi, MD2Wataru Kamei, MD, PhD3Mari Shimizu, MD, PhD4Masaki Takeuchi, MD, PhD5From the * Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, School of Medicine, Tokyo Women’s Medical University, Tokyo, Japan‡ Division of Plastic Surgery, University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, Mass.† Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Yachiyo Medical Center, Tokyo Women’s Medical University, Chiba, JapanFrom the * Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, School of Medicine, Tokyo Women’s Medical University, Tokyo, Japan† Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Yachiyo Medical Center, Tokyo Women’s Medical University, Chiba, Japan† Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Yachiyo Medical Center, Tokyo Women’s Medical University, Chiba, JapanBackground:. Pressure injuries (PIs) are common in hospitalized patients, with incidence exceeding 50% in high-risk patients. Immobilization causes a prolonged compression of vascular networks in tissues overlying bony prominences, leading to ischemia and ulceration. Traditionally, PIs are treated with a combination of surgical debridement and reconstruction. This approach can be invasive for debilitated patients who cannot tolerate prolonged surgeries and extensive tissue resection. Hydrosurgery uses high-pressure irrigation to low-invasively debride and cleanse wounds; its use has shown positive outcomes in burn and chronic wounds care. Here, we hypothesize that hydrosurgery allows low-invasive yet effective wound bed preparation in truncal PIs. Methods:. We conducted a single-center, prospective, uncontrolled case series. Inclusion criteria for this study were presence of a truncal PI (stage III or IV) and an American Society of Anesthesiologists physical status of ≥2 (no exclusion criteria). Measured outcomes included duration of hydrosurgery, postsurgical local (dehiscence, infection, seroma) or systemic complications in the first 30 days, and PI recurrence rate (6-month follow-up). Results:. Seven patients (3 sacral, 2 greater trochanteric, and 2 ischial tuberosity PIs) were enrolled for this study. Average duration of hydrosurgery was 12 minutes (±3.1). No local or systemic complications were observed at a 30-day follow-up (0/7, 0%). All flaps (6/7, 86%) and graft (1/7, 14%) reconstructions successfully survived, and no PI recurrence was reported within a 6-month follow-up (0/7, 0%). Conclusions:. Hydrosurgery seems to allow safe, low-invasive, and effective wound bed preparation in truncal PIs. Larger controlled trials are needed to confirm this preliminary evidence, to guide its broader adoption for improved care of high-risk patients with PIs.http://journals.lww.com/prsgo/fulltext/10.1097/GOX.0000000000002921 |
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DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Hajime Matsumine, MD, PhD Giorgio Giatsidis, MD, PhD Mika Takagi, MD Wataru Kamei, MD, PhD Mari Shimizu, MD, PhD Masaki Takeuchi, MD, PhD |
spellingShingle |
Hajime Matsumine, MD, PhD Giorgio Giatsidis, MD, PhD Mika Takagi, MD Wataru Kamei, MD, PhD Mari Shimizu, MD, PhD Masaki Takeuchi, MD, PhD Hydrosurgical Debridement Allows Effective Wound Bed Preparation of Pressure Injuries: A Prospective Case Series Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Global Open |
author_facet |
Hajime Matsumine, MD, PhD Giorgio Giatsidis, MD, PhD Mika Takagi, MD Wataru Kamei, MD, PhD Mari Shimizu, MD, PhD Masaki Takeuchi, MD, PhD |
author_sort |
Hajime Matsumine, MD, PhD |
title |
Hydrosurgical Debridement Allows Effective Wound Bed Preparation of Pressure Injuries: A Prospective Case Series |
title_short |
Hydrosurgical Debridement Allows Effective Wound Bed Preparation of Pressure Injuries: A Prospective Case Series |
title_full |
Hydrosurgical Debridement Allows Effective Wound Bed Preparation of Pressure Injuries: A Prospective Case Series |
title_fullStr |
Hydrosurgical Debridement Allows Effective Wound Bed Preparation of Pressure Injuries: A Prospective Case Series |
title_full_unstemmed |
Hydrosurgical Debridement Allows Effective Wound Bed Preparation of Pressure Injuries: A Prospective Case Series |
title_sort |
hydrosurgical debridement allows effective wound bed preparation of pressure injuries: a prospective case series |
publisher |
Wolters Kluwer |
series |
Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Global Open |
issn |
2169-7574 |
publishDate |
2020-06-01 |
description |
Background:. Pressure injuries (PIs) are common in hospitalized patients, with incidence exceeding 50% in high-risk patients. Immobilization causes a prolonged compression of vascular networks in tissues overlying bony prominences, leading to ischemia and ulceration. Traditionally, PIs are treated with a combination of surgical debridement and reconstruction. This approach can be invasive for debilitated patients who cannot tolerate prolonged surgeries and extensive tissue resection. Hydrosurgery uses high-pressure irrigation to low-invasively debride and cleanse wounds; its use has shown positive outcomes in burn and chronic wounds care. Here, we hypothesize that hydrosurgery allows low-invasive yet effective wound bed preparation in truncal PIs.
Methods:. We conducted a single-center, prospective, uncontrolled case series. Inclusion criteria for this study were presence of a truncal PI (stage III or IV) and an American Society of Anesthesiologists physical status of ≥2 (no exclusion criteria). Measured outcomes included duration of hydrosurgery, postsurgical local (dehiscence, infection, seroma) or systemic complications in the first 30 days, and PI recurrence rate (6-month follow-up).
Results:. Seven patients (3 sacral, 2 greater trochanteric, and 2 ischial tuberosity PIs) were enrolled for this study. Average duration of hydrosurgery was 12 minutes (±3.1). No local or systemic complications were observed at a 30-day follow-up (0/7, 0%). All flaps (6/7, 86%) and graft (1/7, 14%) reconstructions successfully survived, and no PI recurrence was reported within a 6-month follow-up (0/7, 0%).
Conclusions:. Hydrosurgery seems to allow safe, low-invasive, and effective wound bed preparation in truncal PIs. Larger controlled trials are needed to confirm this preliminary evidence, to guide its broader adoption for improved care of high-risk patients with PIs. |
url |
http://journals.lww.com/prsgo/fulltext/10.1097/GOX.0000000000002921 |
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