Artificial Dermis for Major Burns
- 1 September 1988
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Annals of Surgery
- Vol. 208 (3) , 313-320
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00000658-198809000-00008
Abstract
This communication presents an 11-center prospective randomized trial using the artificial dermis invented by Burke and Yannas. Patients with life-threatening burns who underwent primary excision and grafting within 7 days of injury had comparable sites randomized to receive either the artificial dermis (study site) or the investigator's usual skin grafting material (control site). Control materials were autograft, allograft, xenograft, or a synthetic dressing. Epidermal grafts were applied to the study site during a second operation, and surviving patients were followed for 1 year after grafting. One hundred thirty-nine sites on 106 patients were studied. Mean burn size was 46.5 ± 15% mean total body surface (TBSA). Overall mortality was 13%, and mean hospital stay was 68 ± 45 days. Median artificial dermis take was 80% compared with 95% for all comparative sites, but the take was equivalent to that of all nonautograft control materials. Results with the artificial dermis improved slightly as the investigators became more familiar with the material. Donor site thickness for the study site averaged .006“ ± .002” compared to .013“ ± .018” for control (p < .0001) and the epidermal donor site healed an average of 4 days sooner (10 ± 6 vs. 14 ± 8 days) (p < .0001). As the wounds matured during the first year, both patients and surgeons felt that both sites became more comparable in appearance and function. At the completion of the study, there was less hypertrophic scarring of the artificial dermis, and more patients preferred the artificial dermis to the control graft. Artificial dermis with an epidermal graft provides a permanent cover that is at least as satisfactory as currently available skin grafting techniques, and uses donor grafts that are thinner and donor sites that heal faster.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- CYCLOSPORINE AND SKIN ALLOGRAFTS FOR THE TREATMENT OF THERMAL INJURYTransplantation, 1988
- Cultured epithelium as a skin substituteBurns, 1987
- Biosynthetic Skin Substitute versus Frozen Human Cadaver Allograft for Temporary Coverage of Excised Burn WoundsPublished by Wolters Kluwer Health ,1987
- Microskin grafting. II. Clinical reportBurns, 1986
- LONG-TERM SKIN ALLOGRAFT SURVIVAL AFTER SHORT-TERM CYCLOSPORIN TREATMENT IN A PATIENT WITH MASSIVE BURNSThe Lancet, 1986
- Permanent Coverage of Large Burn Wounds with Autologous Cultured Human EpitheliumNew England Journal of Medicine, 1984
- Synthetic materials for covering burn wounds: Progress towards perfection. Part I. Short term dressing materialsBurns, 1983
- Synthetic materials for covering burn wounds: Progress towards perfection. Part II. Longer term substitutes for skinBurns, 1983
- Successful Use of a Physiologically Acceptable Artificial Skin in the Treatment of Extensive Burn InjuryAnnals of Surgery, 1981
- Immunosuppression and Temporary Skin Transplantation in the Treatment of Massive Third Degree BurnsAnnals of Surgery, 1975