Complications using tissue expanders in burn sequelae treatment at a reference university hospital: a retrospective study

Author:

VANA LUIZ PHILIPE MOLINA1ORCID,LOBATO RODOLFO COSTA1ORCID,BRAGAGNOLLO JOÃO PAULO FONTANA1,LOPES CRISTIANE PEREIRA1,NAKAMOTO HUGO ALBERTO1ORCID,FONTANA CARLOS1,GEMPERLI ROLF1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Universidade de São Paulo, Brazil

Abstract

ABSTRACT Background: tissue expanders have high relevance in plastic surgery and among indications it is worth mentioning their use in the treatment of burn reconstruction. Although it shows good results, its use requires special care because some complications can interrupt the reconstruction process. The objective of this study was to report the experience of the Clinics Hospital (University of Sao Paulo) with the use of tissue expanders to treat burn sequelae, establishing the incidence of complications, and identifying risk factors for their occurrence. Methods: a retrospective, observational, and analytical study, evaluating the use of expanders in burns sequelae treatment from 2009 to 2018. Results: 245 expanders were placed in 84 patients, 215 were female, with a mean age of 19.96 years, being 40% in the trunk and 20% in the scalp, with a predominance of rectangular shape in 76.7% of cases. Complications were classified as major and minor.Complications occurred in 17.95% of cases, and extrusion and infection were the most common. There was a higher incidence of complications in expanders used in the upper and lower limbs as well as in those who did not undergo concomitant expansion (p <0.05), with an even higher chance of major complications in patients submitted to additional expansion. From 2009 to 2018, we observed a decrease in the incidence of complications. Conclusion: the complication rate (17.95%) is similar to other studies of the literature, there was a higher rate of complication with expanders placed in the limbs and a higher rate of major complications when additional expansion was done.

Publisher

FapUNIFESP (SciELO)

Subject

Surgery

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