Reconstruction of the Upper Extremity High-Voltage Electrical Injury: A Pediatric Burn Hospital’s 13-Year Experience

Author:

DePamphilis Matthew A12,Cauley Ryan P34,Sadeq Farzin1,Lydon Martha1,Sheridan Robert L135,Winograd Jonathan M367,Driscoll Daniel N1367

Affiliation:

1. Department of Clinical Research, Shriners Hospitals for Children—Boston, Massachusetts, USA

2. Boston University School of Medicine, Massachusetts, USA

3. Department of Surgery, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA

4. Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts, USA

5. Burn Surgery Service, Shriners Hospitals for Children—Boston, Massachusetts, USA

6. Division of Plastic, Reconstructive, and Laser Surgery, Shriners Hospitals for Children—Boston, Massachusetts, USA

7. Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, USA

Abstract

Abstract High-voltage electrical injury is a rare yet destructive class of burn injury that persists as a serious public health issue. High-voltage exposure is commonly associated with complex wounds to the upper extremities, which can be a significant challenge for burn and plastic surgeons to reconstruct. This intensive and multistage reconstructive process is especially difficult in the growing child. Maximizing upper extremity function is a top priority, as it can have a significant impact on a patient’s quality of life. Therefore, the purpose of this retrospective review was to describe lessons learned during a 13-year experience at a specialized pediatric burn hospital with reconstruction of the upper extremity after severe high-voltage injury in 37 children. We found that adherence to the following principles can help promote meaningful functional recovery. These include 1) frequent assessment during early acute care for the evolving need of decompression or amputation; 2) serial surgical debridement that follows a tissue-sparing technique; 3) wound closure by skin grafting or use of flaps (particularly groin or abdominal pedicled flaps) when deep musculoskeletal structures are involved; 4) early multidisciplinary intervention for contracture prevention and management, including physical and occupational therapy, splinting, and fixation; 5) reconstructive care that focuses on the simplest possible techniques to repair chronic skin defects such as laser therapy, local tissue rearrangements, and skin grafting; 6) complex reconstruction to address deeper tissue contractures or tendon and peripheral nerve deficits; and 7) amputation with preservation of growth plates, tissue transfer, and long-term prosthetic management when limb salvage is unlikely.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Rehabilitation,Emergency Medicine,Surgery

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