The Influence of Blood Parameters on the Adhesion of an Epidermal Substitute in the Treatment of Burn Wounds in Children
Aleksandra Barbachowska, Piotr Tomaka, Agnieszka Surowiecka, Maciej Łączyk, Zofia Górecka, Adam Stepniewski, Anna Chrapusta, Rafał Sadowy, Jerzy Strużyna, Tomasz Korzeniowski

TL;DR
This study explores how blood parameters affect the adhesion of a skin substitute used to treat burn wounds in children.
Contribution
The study identifies specific blood parameters that influence dressing adhesion in pediatric burn treatment.
Findings
Pre-treatment leukocyte levels showed the strongest relationship with dressing adhesion.
Hemoglobin, protein, and glucose levels also significantly influenced dressing attachment.
Few parameters showed statistically significant differences between attached and detached dressing groups.
Abstract
Background: Burns in children represent a significant public health issue, as there is no single targeted dressing for the treatment of burn wounds in children. The alloplastic epidermal skin substitute is the dressing of choice for treating burns in children in our burn center. However, it sometimes occurs that the dressing separates from the wound too early, before the process of full re-epithelialization. The inflammatory phase of wound healing seems to be crucial for maintaining the adhesion of the dressing, and thus, changes in parameters such as leukocyte levels and protein changes are of clinical significance. The aim of our study is to find laboratory factors that could contribute to premature dressing separation. Methods: The documentation of 182 children treated for acute burns at a major Polish burn center in the years 2009–2023 was analyzed. A demographic analysis was…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBurn Injury Management and Outcomes · Wound Healing and Treatments · Pressure Ulcer Prevention and Management
