| Literature DB >> 27867809 |
Hyun Ho Han1, Daiwon Jun2, Suk-Ho Moon2, In Sook Kang3, Min Cheol Kim3.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: For skin defects caused by full-thickness burns, trauma, or tumor tissue excision, skin grafting is one of the most convenient and useful treatment methods. In this situation, graft fixation is important in skin grafting. This study was performed to compare the effectiveness of skin graft fixation between high-concentration fibrin sealant and sutures. There have been numerous studies using fibrin sealant for graft fixation, but they utilized slow-clotting fibrin sealant containing less than 10 IU/mL thrombin.Entities:
Keywords: Fast clotting; Fibrin sealant; Split-thickness skin graft; Suture; Thrombin
Year: 2016 PMID: 27867809 PMCID: PMC5093101 DOI: 10.1186/s40064-016-3599-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Springerplus ISSN: 2193-1801
Fig. 1(left above) Leftankle skin defect due to a pedestrian accident in a 6-year-old boy. (right above) Fast-clotting fibrin sealant containing 400 IU/mL thrombinwas sprayed on the healthy wound bed with a thickness of 0.05 mL/cm2. Fibrin clotting was already observed before applying the split-thickness skin graft. (left below) Fibrin sealant was applied once more to the graft boundary. (right below) Moderate compressive dressing was performed using a gauze bandage
Fig. 2(left) Right leg contact burn in a 42-year-old man. No hematoma was seen 5 days after split-thickness skin grafting using fibrin glue. (right) No skin loss orsuture mark scar was observed 1.5 months postoperatively
Fig. 3(left) Right hand friction burn in a 54-year-old man. (center) Split-thickness skin grafting was performed using fibrin glue. (right) No hypertrophic scar orsuture mark scar was observed 8 months postoperatively
Fig. 4(left) Left hand contact burn in a 20-year-old woman. Split-thickness skin grafting was performed using sutures, and tie-over dressing was applied. (right) A hypertrophic scar and hyperpigmented suture scars were observed 6 months postoperatively
Rates (%) of hematoma/seroma formation, graft dislocation, graft necrosis, and graft take
| Fixation method | Hematoma or seroma formation at 5-days postoperative | Graft dislocation at 5-days postoperative | Graft necrosis at 30-days postoperative (the range) | Graft take (100 − necrosis rate) at 30-days postoperative (the range) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fibrin glue with undiluted high-concentration thrombin (group I) | 7.84 | 1.29 | 1.86 (1.06–4.5) | 98.14 (95.5–98.94) |
| Silk sutures or staples (group II) | 9.55 | 1.45 | 4.65 (2.23–6.65) | 95.35 (93.35–97.77) |
|
| <0.05 | >0.05 | <0.01 | <0.05 |
Fig. 5When analyzing the influence of the area of skin graft (cm2) and graft necrosis which means graft loss (cm2), we observed that in group II the area of necrosis is directly related to the size of the graft (R = 0.945, p < 0.001), while in group I this relation is also observed but showed the less stiffness of the slope (R = 0.852, p < 0.001)