133 Early Assessment of Burn Depth in a Yucatan Minipig Model Using Resonance Raman Spectroscopy
Rohil Jain, Yanis Berkane, Emmanuella O Ajenu, Khanh T Nguyen, Austin A Shamlou, Alexandre G Lellouch, Basak E Uygun, Curtis L Cetrulo, Jr., Mark A Randolph, Korkut Uygun, Padraic Romfh, Shannon N Tessier

TL;DR
This study uses Resonance Raman Spectroscopy to non-invasively assess burn depth in pigs, helping predict healing time and guide treatment decisions.
Contribution
A novel Burn Index derived from RRS measurements can distinguish burn severity and predict healing time with high accuracy.
Findings
The Burn Index (BI) distinguished 2nd and 3rd-degree burns with 79.17% AUC on the day of injury.
BI predicted healing time for 2nd-degree burns with 97.77% AUC by day 2 post-injury.
Intermediate burns with different healing potentials were successfully modeled in Yucatan minipigs.
Abstract
Assessment of thermal burns in the acute phase is critical since healing may require surgical intervention depending on the depth of injury. Early depth estimation guides debridement and planning care strategy. Current assessment standard has limitations, and biopsies are invasive and painful. There is an urgent need for a rapid, non-invasive, and objective metric of burn depth. We created a model to study intermediate burn depth in Yucatan miniature pigs, which is clinically relevant. Brass blocks of 4cm radius create contact burns by preheating to 63°C for 2nd-degree (intermediate), and 95°C for 3rd-degree (full thickness) burns. Contact duration varied between 15 to 45 seconds for 2-degree burns to create different depths. Burns are evenly distributed and randomized on the dorsal paravertebral region of the pigs. Full-thickness burns were debrided on POD 3. Each wound was assessed…
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Taxonomy
TopicsWound Healing and Treatments
