| Literature DB >> 25180087 |
Manaf Khatib1, Shehab Jabir1, Edmund Fitzgerald O'Connor1, Bruce Philp1.
Abstract
Aims. The introduction of laser Doppler (LD) techniques to assess burn depth has revolutionized the treatment of burns of indeterminate depth. This paper will systematically review studies related to these two techniques and trace their evolution. At the same time we hope to highlight current controversies and areas where further research is necessary with regard to LD imaging (LDI) techniques. Methods. A systematic search for relevant literature was carried out on PubMed, Medline, EMBASE, and Google Scholar. Key search terms included the following: "Laser Doppler imaging," "laser Doppler flow," and "burn depth." Results. A total of 53 studies were identified. Twenty-six studies which met the inclusion/exclusion criteria were included in the review. Conclusions. The numerous advantages of LDI over those of LD flowmetry have resulted in the former technique superseding the latter one. Despite the presence of alternative burn depth assessment techniques, LDI remains the most favoured. Various newer LDI machines with increasingly sophisticated methods of assessing burn depth have been introduced throughout the years. However, factors such as cost effectiveness, scanning of topographically inconsistent areas of the body, and skewing of results due to tattoos, peripheral vascular disease, and anaemia continue to be sighted as obstacles to LDI which require further research.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25180087 PMCID: PMC4142313 DOI: 10.1155/2014/621792
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plast Surg Int ISSN: 2090-1461
Inclusion and exclusion criteria for this systematic review.
| Inclusion Criteria | |
| (i) Studies involving humans | |
| (ii) English language publication | |
| (iii) Studies published from inception of database to February | |
| Exclusion Criteria | |
| (i) Use of LD techniques on animal models | |
| (ii) Non-English language publication | |
| (iii) Purely technical descriptions of the use of LD techniques |
Summary of retrieved studies in the literature.
| Authors | Year | Type of study | Patient | Burns | Type of laser Doppler device | Surgery needed | Findings | Limitation |
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| Green et al. [ | 1988 | Observational Study | 10 | 13 | LD flowmetry | 6 | Statistically significant difference in LD value between healing and nonhealing group | Lack of description of methodology of measurement |
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| O'Reilly et al. [ | 1989 | Prospective cohort | 41 | 59 | LD flowmetry | 8 | LD < 1.4 PPV 98.4%, LD > 1.4 deemed superficial and will heal within 21 days | 43 > 1.4 LD burned areas excised and grafted |
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| Waxman et al. [ | 1989 | Prospective cohort | 33 | 51 | LD Flowmetry | 18 | 100% specificity re: healing if flow >6 mL/100 g/min | TBSA not specified |
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| Niazi et al. [ | 1993 | Prospective cohort | 13 | 13 | LD imaging | 7 | Good correlation of LDI with histological assessment | No statistical analysis |
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| Atiles et al. [ | 1995 | Prospective cohort | 21 | 86 | LD flowmetry | 33 | <40 PU; Sen: 0.46, Spec: 1.0, PPV: 1.0, NPV: 0.85 | No histological assessment. No burn cause identified |
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| Park et al. [ | 1998 | Prospective cohort | 44 | 100 | LD flowmetry | Not specified | Primary outcome; healing at 2 weeks | Surgery not specified—just said not healed 2 weeks |
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| Banwell et al. [ | 1999 | Prospective cohort | 30 | n/a | LD flowmetry and LD imaging | Not specified | Good correlation LDI results and histology | No stats |
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| Pape et al. [ | 2001 | Prospective cohort | 48 | 76 | LD imaging | 25 | 97% PPV of LDI compared with 70% of clinical assessment | |
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| Kloppenberg et al. [ | 2001 | Prospective cohort | 16 | 22 | LD imaging | 6 | Sensitivity 100% and specificity 93.8% on day 4 | Invalid statistical analysis |
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| Holland et al. [ | 2002 | Prospective cohort | 57 | 57 | LD imaging | 17 | Deep dermal; partial thickness | Mobility of children |
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| Jeng et al. [ | 2003 | Prospective blinded trial | 23 | 41 | LD imaging | 7 | 56% agreement between clinician and LDI | 8/18 burns deemed superficial by LDI but required grafting |
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| Mileski et al. [ | 2003 | Prospective cohort | 56 | 159 | LD flowmetry | 53 | Sensitivity: 68% | Clinical assessment once versus serial LDI |
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Riordan et al. [ | 2003 | Prospective blinded trial | 22 | 35 | PIM #II LISCA | 24 | At threshold value of 1.3 | |
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| La Hei et al. [ | 2006 | Prospective blinded trial | 31 | 50 | LD imaging | 22 | Sensitivity: 97% | Statistical analysis and small number |
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| McGill et al. [ | 2007 | Prospective blinded comparison | 20 | 27 | LD imaging | 10 | LDI: | No histological assessment |
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| Hoeksema et al. [ | 2009 | Prospective blinded trial | 40 | 40 | LD imaging | 12 | Sensitivity increases with days after burn. Statistically significantly better than clinical assessment from day 3 | 2 cases that required surgery and histology showed that burn wound was superficial in nature |
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| Cho et al. [ | 2009 | Prospective cohort study | 103 | 181 | LD imaging | n/a | Healing by 14 days at PU of 250 Sensitivity 80.6% and Specificity 76.9% | No confirmation of superficial nature of burn with histology |
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| Mill et al. [ | 2009 | Prospective cohort study | 48 | 85 | LD imaging | 6 | Scans within 24 h accurately predict outcome | No blinding |
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| Kim et al. [ | 2010 | Case-control trial | 196 | 196 | LD imaging | 196 | Reduction in decision for surgery in LDI group 8.9 days versus 11.6 days in control group ( | No randomisation |
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| Merz et al. [ | 2010 | Retrospective cohort study | 28 | 173 | LD flowmetry | 88 | Sensitivity: 80.6% | No histological assessment |
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| Nguyen et al. [ | 2010 | Prospective cohort | 400 | 637 | LD imaging | 89 | <48 h | No histological assessment in patients operated on |
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| Lindahl et al. [ | 2013 | Prospective cohort | 14 | 45 | LD imaging | n/a | Higher perfusion in burns healing in less than 14 days compared to more than 14 days from day 0 from burn. | Small sample of patients |
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| Menon et al. [ | 2012 | Retrospective cohort | 36 | 36 | Not specified | 12 | 64% accuracy of LDI predicting burn outcome | Small sample of patients |
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| Pape et al. [ | 2012 | Prospective cohort | 137 | 433 | LD Imaging | ns | Development of validated colour code for interpretation and link to burn outcome | |
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| Park et al. [ | 2013 | Retrospective cohort | 96 | 101 | LD imaging | 46 | Cut-off point of 154.7PU | |
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| Stewart et al. [ | 2012 | Prospective blinded control trial | 38 | 105 | LD imaging | 64 | LDI has PPV > 90% accurate in determining need for grafting | |
Figure 1The Moor LDI system used by Pape et al. in their study and in our burns unit at St. Andrews Centre for Plastic Surgery and Burns.
Figure 2Appearance of a burn wound using the Aimago EasyLDI technology. It enables visualization of the microcirculation and the blood flow in small vessels with the increasingly red regions indicating greater blood flow.