Timing of Flap Surgery in Acute Burn Patients Does Not Affect Complications

Author:

Perrault David1,Rochlin Danielle1,Pham Christopher2ORCID,Momeni Arash1,Karanas Yvonne13,Sheckter Clifford C1

Affiliation:

1. Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Stanford University, California

2. Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, University of Southern California, Los Angeles

3. Regional Burn Center, Santa Clara Valley Medical Center, San Jose, California

Abstract

Abstract Pedicled and free flaps are occasionally necessary to reconstruct complex wounds in acute burn patients. Flap coverage has classically been delayed for concern of progressive tissue necrosis and flap failure. We aim to investigate flap complications in primary burn care leveraging national U.S. data. Acute burn patients with known % total body surface area(TBSA) were extracted from the Nationwide/National Inpatient Sample from 2002 to 2014 based on the International Classification of Disease (ICD) codes, ninth edition. Variables included age, sex, race, Elixhauser index, %TBSA, mechanism, inhalation injury, and location of burn. Flap complication was defined by ICD-9 procedure code 86.75, return to the operating room for flap revision. Multivariable analysis evaluated predictors of flap compromise using stepwise logistic regression with backward elimination. The weighted sample included 306,924 encounters of which 526 received a flap (0.17%). About 7.8% of flap encounters sustained electric injury compared to 2.7% of non-flap encounters (odds ratio [OR] 3.76, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.95–7.24, P < .001). The mean hospital day of the flap procedure was 10.1 (SD 10.7) days. Flap complications occurred in 6.4% of cases. The timing of flap coverage was not associated with complications. The only independent predictor of flap complication was electrical injury (OR 40.49, 95% CI 2.98–550.64, P = .005). Electrical injury was an independent predictor of flap complications compared to other mechanisms. Flap timing was not associated with return to surgery for complications. This suggests that the use of flaps is safe in acute burn care to achieve burn wound closure with an understanding that electrical injuries may warrant particular consideration to avoid failure.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Rehabilitation,Emergency Medicine,Surgery

Reference18 articles.

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2. Early free-flap coverage of electrical and thermal burns;Chick;Plast Reconstr Surg,1992

3. A systematic review of the applications of free tissue transfer in burns;Jabir;Burns,2014

4. The role of microsurgical flaps in primary burn reconstruction;Pessoa Vaz;Ann Burns Fire Disasters,2018

5. Experience of 14 years of emergency reconstruction of electrical injuries;Zhu;Burns,2003

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