A retrospective study on the association of keloids with underlying health conditions in African-American Women.

Q2 Medicine
Pooja Marella, Donald A Glass
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Keloids are disfiguring benign scars that develop due to an exaggerated response to cutaneous wound healing, growing beyond the boundaries of the cutaneous insult into normal, previously uninvolved skin. The association of keloids with other underlying health conditions has been postulated, but not well characterized.

Objective: This study aims to identify whether there is any association of keloids with underlying health conditions in African-American women.

Methods: This study was done via the use of the National Inpatient Sample, a subset of the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project. African-American women with keloids who had undergone cesarean sections were compared with a control group of African-American women with no history of keloids who had undergone cesarean sections.

Results: A total of 301 African-American inpatient encounters with patients with keloids were compared with 37,144 encounters in the control group. The keloid patients had an increased association with peritoneal adhesions compared with the control group.

Limitations: results are limited to one race and restricted age range; also, unable to differentiate keloids from hypetrophic scarring with ICD-10 codes.

Conclusion: These findings suggest that keloids and peritoneal adhesions may have similar inflammatory processes.

非裔美国妇女瘢痕疙瘩与潜在健康状况关联的回顾性研究
瘢痕疙瘩是一种毁容的良性疤痕,由于皮肤伤口愈合的过度反应而形成,生长超出皮肤损伤的边界,进入正常的、先前未受损伤的皮肤。瘢痕疙瘩与其他潜在健康状况的关联已被假设,但尚未很好地表征。目的:本研究旨在确定非裔美国女性瘢痕疙瘩是否与潜在健康状况有关。方法:本研究通过使用全国住院病人样本,医疗成本和利用项目的一个子集来完成。研究人员将有瘢痕疙瘩的非裔美国妇女剖宫产手术与没有瘢痕疙瘩病史的非裔美国妇女剖宫产手术进行比较。结果:共有301例非裔美国住院患者与瘢痕疙瘩患者的接触与对照组的37,144例接触进行了比较。与对照组相比,瘢痕疙瘩患者与腹膜粘连的相关性增加。局限性:结果仅限于一个种族和限定的年龄范围;此外,无法区分瘢痕疙瘩和瘢痕增生与ICD-10代码。结论:这些发现提示瘢痕疙瘩和腹膜粘连可能具有相似的炎症过程。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
52
审稿时长
18 weeks
期刊介绍: The IJWD publishes articles pertaining to dermatologic medical, surgical and cosmetic issues faced by female patients and their families. We are interested in original research articles, review articles, unusual case reports, new treatments, clinical trials, education, mentorship and viewpoint articles. Articles dealing with ethical issues in dermatology and medical legal scenarios are also welcome.Very important articles will have accompanying editorials. Topics which our subsections editors look forward to welcoming include: Women’s Health Oncology, Surgery and Aesthetics Pediatric Dermatology Medical Dermatology Society.
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