Abdominal contouring operations are in high demand after massive weight loss. Anecdotally, wound problems seemed to occur frequently in this patient population. Our study was designed to delineate risk factors for wound complications after body contouring. Our retrospective institutional analysis was assembled from 222 patients between 2001 and 2006 who underwent either abdominoplasty (N = 89) or panniculectomy (N = 133). Weight loss surgery (WLS) before body contouring occurred in 63% of our patients. Overall the wound complication rate in these patients was 34%: healing-disturbance 11%, wound infection 12%, hematoma 6%, and seroma 14%. WLS patients had an increase in wound complications overall (41% vs. 22%; P < 0.01) and in all categories of wound complications compared with non-WLS-patients by univariate methods of analysis. In a multivariate regression model, only American Society of Anesthesiologists Physical Status Classification was a significant independent risk factor for wound complications. In conclusion, WLS patients are at increased risk for wound complications and American Society of Anesthesiologists Physical Status Classification is the most predictive of risk.
Partial-thickness burn injuries incite a multitude of responses which eventually culminate in cutaneous wound repair. We hypothesized that these events would evoke extensive alterations in gene expression thereby orchestrating the complexity of spatial and temporal events that characterize “normal” human wound healing. In the present study, gene expressions from partial-thickness areas at defined temporal periods (1-3 days, 4-6 days, and 7-18 days) after injury were compared to normal non-wounded skin. Gene alterations proved extensive (2,286 genes). Statistically significant alterations were noted among increased and decreased genes expressed in the 3 different temporal groupings. Our foundational data (based on samples from 45 individuals) provide a comprehensive molecular gene expression portrait of the cutaneous reparative responses that are initiated during the first 17 days after injury. Our efforts also represent an initial endeavor to move beyond the historically defined “morphological phases” of wound repair toward reporting molecular clues that define the temporal sequence of healing in human subjects. Further analysis of genes that are either modulated or remain non-modulated following injury to normal skin is expected to identify potential targets for therapeutic augmentation or silencing.
Nine clinically healthy men, 41-47 yr of age, served as subjects in a 24-hr study conducted at the Edward Hines Jr Veterans Administration Hospital in the Chicago area in May 1988. Physiologic measurements, and blood and urine samples were collected at 3-hr intervals over a single 24-hr period beginning at 1900. The number of variables measured or calculated (total = 98) included: 6 vital signs (oral temperature, pulse, blood- and intraocular pressures); 16 in whole blood (counts and differentials); 50 in serum (SMAC-24, lipids, hormones, electrophoresis of LDH and proteins); and 26 in urine (solids, proteins, creatinine, catecholamines, melatonin, cortisol, electrolytes and metals). Data were analyzed for time effect by analysis of variance (ANOVA) and for circadian rhythm by single cosinor. Individual rhythm characteristics for each variable were summarized for the group by population mean cosinor. The vast majority of variables revealed statistically significant within-day changes in values as validated by one-way ANOVA. All vital signs (except for intraocular pressures) and all serum hormones displayed a prominent circadian rhythm for the group, as did most variables in whole blood, while only about half of the variables in urine demonstrated a significant group rhythm. The results obtained are meant to: (a) document the circadian time structure; and (b) serve as reference values for circadian rhythm characteristics (range of change, mesor, amplitude and acrophase) for a defined group of individuals: clinically-healthy adult men in the prime of life.
Adrenal insufficiency (AI) is an uncommon life-threatening development in trauma patients. The aim of this study was to determine if adrenal injury sustained during blunt trauma is associated with an increased risk of AI. A single-institution retrospective cohort review was performed over a 3-year period on all patients with blunt trauma requiring intensive care admission and mechanical ventilation for longer than 24 hours. Adrenal injuries were identified on admission CT scan. All patients with AI were identified as noted by practice management guidelines. Patients were stratified by Injury Severity Score (ISS) as less than 16, 16 to 25, and greater than 25 and relative risks were calculated. Multiple logistic regression was performed using age, race, sex, Glasgow Coma Scale, ISS, length of hospitalization, and adrenal injury as covariates with AI as the outcome of interest. A secondary analysis was then performed with adrenal injury classified as bilateral versus unilateral or no adrenal injury and relative risks were calculated for ISS strata. A total of 2072 patients were identified with 71 developing AI. Adrenal injuries were noted in 113 patients with eight subsequently developing AI. Multiple logistic regression model (P < 0.01) showed that age (P < 0.01) and increasing ISS (P = 0.02) were predictive of AI. Adrenal injury was not an independent predictor of AI (P = 0.12). After controlling for age and ISS, adrenal injury was not an independent predictor of the development of AI. Adrenal insufficiency should be considered with increasing injury severity and age in the intensive care setting after blunt trauma.
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