Ablative fractional CO2 laser surgery improving sleep quality, pain and pruritus in adult hypertrophic scar patients: a prospective cohort study

Author:

Lv Kaiyang12,Liu Huazhen2,Xu Haiting34,Wang Caixia5,Zhu Shihui2,Lou Xiaozhen2,Luo Pengfei2,Xiao Shichu2,Xia Zhaofan2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Plastic Surgery, Xinhua Hospital, Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine, Shanghai 200092; People’s Republic of China

2. Department of Burn Surgery, the First affiliated Hospital to Naval Medical University, Shanghai 200433, People’s Republic of China

3. Department of Burn and Plastic Surgery, Shandong Provincial Hospital Affiliated to Shandong University, Jinan, Shandong 250021, People's Republic of China

4. Department of Plastic Surgery, The Second Affiliated Hospital and Yuying Children’s Hospital of Wenzhou Medical University, Wenzhou, Zhejiang 325000, People's Republic of China

5. Shanghai Institute of Laser Technology, Shanghai 200233, People’s Republic of China

Abstract

Abstract Background Poor sleep quality is associated with a decrease in quality of life in patients with major burn scars, combined with pruritus and pain. Few interventions have been reported to improve the sleep quality of patients with scars. In the current prospective cohort study, we investigated the efficacy of CO2-ablative fractional laser (AFL) surgery vs conventional surgery in post-burn patients with hypertrophic scars with sleep quality as the primary study outcome. Methods In total 68 consecutive patients undergoing scar surgical treatment were recruited, including a CO2-AFL surgery cohort (n = 35) and a conventional surgery cohort (n = 33). A subgroup from the AFL cohort was selected. Sleep quality, pain and pruritus were evaluated. Multiple linear regression analyses were performed to reveal the effect of CO2-AFL surgery. Results The CO2-AFL surgery cohort had significantly lower Pittsburgh sleep quality index (PSQI) global scores than the conventional surgery cohort after the last surgical treatment. In the subgroup of patients receiving hardware sleep monitoring, CO2-AFL markedly increased deep sleep time, deep sleep efficiency and reduced initial sleep latency. Compared to the conventional surgery cohort, the CO2-AFL cohort presented significantly lower pain and pruritus scores. Correlation analysis showed pain and pruritus were significantly associated with PSQI scores, and there were also significant correlations between pain and pruritus scores. Multiple linear regression analysis showed that surgery method was negatively linearly correlated with visual analog scale (VAS) pain score, brief pain inventory (BPI) total, VAS pruritus score, 5-D itch scale total, four-item itch questionnaire (FIIQ) total and PSQI total. Conclusions CO2-AFL surgery significantly improved sleep quality and reduced pain and pruritus of hypertrophic scar patients. The alleviation of sleep disorder was associated with improvement of deep sleep quality including deep sleep time and deep sleep deficiency. Trial registration The Chinese Clinical Trial Registry (ChiCTR200035268) approved retrospectively registration on 5 Aug 2020.

Funder

Special Scientific Research Fund of the Public Welfare Profession of China

Excellent Discipline Leader Training Program of Shanghai Health System

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Shanghai Hospital Development Center

Shanghai Rising-Star Program

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine,Dermatology,Biomedical Engineering,Emergency Medicine,Immunology and Allergy,Surgery

Reference40 articles.

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2. Keloids and hypertrophic scars: pathophysiology, classification, and treatment;Berman;Dermatol Surg.,2017

3. Chinese expert consensus on clinical prevention and treatment of scar;Lv;Burns & trauma.,2018

4. Epidemiology and risk factors for pathologic scarring after burn wounds;Gangemi;Arch Facial Plast S.,2008

5. Shine on: review of laser- and light-based therapies for the treatment of burn scars;Hultman;Dermatol Res Pract.,2012

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