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MOIST HEALING AND WOUND CARE INCLUDING BURNS

(Advantages and Current Approaches)

 

Section III.   CURRENT USE OF ANTIBACTERIAL AGENTS IN BURNS

A) Overview

The burn eschar (non-viable tissue) is still considered to be not only a high risk for infection, but also to contain toxins, e.g. oxidants, cytokines which can produce systematic dysfunction.

The major change in burn wound management over the past 40 years has been a more rapid removal of devitalized tissue (eschar) and earlier wound closure. However, the perception of the uninfected eschar as requiring an antibacterial cream (solution) to control infection remains (at least until excision can be initiated if needed). This concept includes not only deep burns to be excised, but mid-deep dermal burns which are managed with a topical cream until the eschar has been removed and a re-epithelializing surface is present. 

Only recently, in more superficial burns (and now deeper burns with the availability of a sulfamylon solution) has "moist wound healing" been used in the burn wound.


OVERVIEW: Most Common Approach

Use of Prophylactic Topical Antibiotic Cream


Use of Topical Antibiotics to Treat Infection


B)   BURN MANAGEMENT

The Superficial Burn

The current approach is to use an occlusive dressing, e.g. xeroform gauze and dressing or a skin substitute to maintain a surface moisture layer. No antibacterial is needed.

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2)    THE MID TO DEEP DERMAL BURN

The most common approach is to use a topical antibacterial cream with fine mesh gauze covered with a dry occlusive dressing once or twice daily. This approach does not produce the optimum healing environment especially with the risk of conversion with surface desiccation.

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Mid to deep dermal burn


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3)     THE FULL THICKNESS BURN

The most common approach to care is the use of a topical antibiotic cream until excision and grafting. These would be little advantages to a moist healing approach using an antibacterial solution (unless the wound was over estimated as to depth on initial assessment).

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C ) THE PROBLEM OF INFECTION IN SKIN GRAFT FOR BURNS

1 ) Overview

As the burn is a contaminated wound, some bacteria will be present on the excised wound surface prior to skin graft placement. Sheet grafts have a low infection risk as wound closure will decrease bacterial count. Meshed grafts however have the added risk of areas of wound surface exposure which are prone to desiccation inflammation and infection. Cultured cell autografts also have seams and open wound areas often contiguous with epithelial cell graft and are very susceptible to damage from bacteria.

Causes of Infection after Skin Graft

Also both local and systemic immune defenses are markedly impaired in the major burn patient increasing wound infection risk. The general consensus is that for meshed grafts some local antibacterial coverage is needed.

2) Use of moist wound healing methods

The use of an occlusive dressing and an antibiotic solution to maintain surface moisture is now a common approach to management of the meshed skin graft (or excised wound)

The Meshed Skin Graft

The most common current approach is to use the moist wound healing techniques using a topical antibiotic solution beneath an occlusive dressing.


Common Antibiotic Solution

*5% sulfamylon solution has been shown to a more effective antibacterial solution and to also not retard healing

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Use of Antibacterial Cream

ADVANTAGE


DISADVANTAGE


It is likely that this depth of burn would heal faster and be less likely to convert using a moist wound healing approach, given the available research on this approach.


The benefits of moist wound healing could be obtained in this type of burn with the use of a topical antibiotic solution which has the following properties.

Properties for Moist Healing


The recent approved 5% sulfamylon solution in fact has these properties, as will be described


Use of Topical Antibiotic Cream for Mid to Deep Dermal Uninfected Burns

(surface pseudo eschar formation is not moist wound healing)

Mid to deep dermal burn not infected with use of antibacterial cream


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Surface dry with pseudo-eschar in place is a Typical appearance with the cream and dry dressing approach

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