Use of Integra artificial skin is associated with decreased length of stay for severely injured adult burn survivors |
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Authors: | Ryan Colleen M Schoenfeld David A Malloy Maryanne Schulz John T Sheridan Robert L Tompkins Ronald G |
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Affiliation: | Department of Surgery, Sumner Redstone Center, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA 02114, USA. |
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Abstract: | Mortality and length of stay (LOS) of survivors was examined retrospectively in 270 adults with acute burns > or =20% of body surface area to determine the effect of Integra Dermal Regeneration Template treatment on outcome. No difference in mortality was found between patients who received Integra (30%; n = 43) and patients who did not (30%; n = 227). Surviving Integra patients (n = 30) stayed longer, but they were more extensively injured than survivors who did not receive Integra (n = 158), and therefore longer hospitalizations were expected. In a subgroup analysis, mean LOS of Integra patients with two or more mortality risk factors (age > 60 years, burn size >40% body surface area, or inhalation injury; n = 15) was 63 days compared with 107 days in patients with two or more risk factors (n = 29) who did not receive Integra ( =.014). Integra use in severely injured burned adults was associated with a marked decrease in LOS. |
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