| Literature DB >> 35233339 |
Berik E Tuleubayev1, Baurzhan B Anapiya2, Yerkin-Dauir T Kurmangaliyev3, Kabylbek R Abugaliyev4.
Abstract
In the world practice of treating burns, acellular matrices have been used for quite a long time. However, the budget for treating one burn patient in Kazakhstan does not exceed $1000. This amount does not cover the costs for procurement of foreign-made xenograft dressings. Because the cattle breeding sector is very well-developed in the country, a domestic xenograft is produced by decellularization and sterilization of the cattle peritoneum, which costs only $10. This case report outlines how we used this matrix in a patient with partial thickness burns. A 45-year-old woman was admitted to the burn department with second stage burns on her back and right shoulder. The burn area comprised 10%, according to the Lund Browder chart. Once formal consent was obtained from the patient, an occlusive dressing was applied from the decellularized cattle peritoneum. Good adhesion of the dressing to the wound bed was noted. The patient was discharged from the hospital on the tenth day. It took 23 days to reach complete epithelialization. No adverse effects were noted. We believe that further studies conducted by our research team will allow this innovative, low-cost, easy-to-apply biologic dressing to be widely used in the therapeutic treatment of burns.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35233339 PMCID: PMC8878626 DOI: 10.1097/GOX.0000000000004150
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plast Reconstr Surg Glob Open ISSN: 2169-7574
Fig. 1.Wound condition after debridement.
Fig. 2.Wounds after the xenograft application.
Fig. 3.The seventh day after the xenograft application. Drying of xenograft. No adhesion at the low back area.
Fig. 4.The fourteenth day after discharge, and 23 days after the xenograft was applied. Complete exfoliation of the xenograft. The wound is epithelialized.