Despite relative early correction of the skull shape, originally scaphocephalic children's neurocognitive performances do not reach the same level in all of the neurocognitive domains as their matched controls at school age. Early operation (=1 month) may decrease this developmental delay. This implies that impairment of brain function has already taken place in utero. For the same reason an early operation seems to be justified not only for correction of the skull shape, but also to allow unrestricted development for the brain. Postponement of the operation would not serve either of these aims.
When inserted into a human incision wound, the Cellstick device harvests inflammatory cells and collects wound fluid, reflecting time-related changes in cell populations and in wound fluid composition. Hyaluronic acid has been postulated to be an important factor in scar reduction in wound healing and in scarless fetal wound healing. The aim of this work was to determine the concentration and variation of hyaluronic acid and proportions of wound cells in closed surgical wounds in children at two time points. The Cellstick device was inserted subcutaneously into the wound at the end of an elective inguinal hernia operation on 37 healthy boys, and the devices were removed 3+/-1 or 24+/-3 hours after surgery. Haluronic acid concentration was measured from the wound fluid and a differential count of the wound cells was performed. There was a significant decrease in hyaluronic acid concentration from 3+/-1 to 24+/-3 hours after surgery (p<0.001, Kruskal-Wallis anova). The variance of hyaluronic acid concentration in wound fluid differed between the wounds at the two time points (p<0.01, Levene test for homogeneity of variance). A positive correlation between hyaluronic acid concentration and patient age (r=0.91, p<0.05, Spearman) at 3+/-1 hours post surgery and between HA and wound lymphocytes (r=0.38, p<0.05, Spearman) was also found. We conclude that the hyaluronic acid concentration in wound fluid peaks early in children and decreases significantly by 3 to 24 hours after surgery, and the concentrations in the wound fluid of healthy boys are more variable 3 hours than at 24 hours after surgery.
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