糖尿病严重程度对足踝烧伤恢复的影响。

IF 1 Q4 CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE
Sheldon A McCown, Elliot T Walters, Alen Palackic, Camila Franco-Mesa, Ashton R Davis, Phillip H Keys, Juquan Song, Steven E Wolf
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:糖尿病患者通常表现为复杂的肢体病理,导致远端肢体感觉受损,使烧伤等触觉损伤难以察觉。我们假设控制不良的糖尿病,由血红蛋白A1c升高所证明,与烧伤患者伤口愈合延迟和并发症增加有关。方法:在TriNetX网络(一个包含8900万美国患者的数据库)中查询足部和脚踝烧伤的糖尿病患者。患者根据糖化血红蛋白分为四组:适当控制(9%)和倾向匹配的非糖尿病对照组。评估的结果包括裂皮植皮、感染、截肢、急性肾衰竭(AKF)和烧伤后一个月内的死亡率。结果:当将A1c控制不良的队列与A1c控制良好和中度控制的队列进行比较时,我们发现截肢(p = 0.042)和皮肤感染(p = 0.0438)的发生率分别显著增加。当对非糖尿病患者与糖尿病患者进行评估时,后者的截肢率(p < 0.0001)、皮肤感染(p = 0.0485)、全身感染(p = 0.0066)和AKF (p = 0.0005)显著增加。结论:控制不良的糖尿病与足部和踝关节烧伤后并发症的增加有显著相关性,包括截肢、感染和AKF。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Effect of Diabetes Mellitus Severity on Foot & Ankle Burn Recovery.

Background: Diabetic patients often present with complex limb pathology, resulting in impaired sensation in the distal extremities making tactile injuries such as burns difficult to notice. We posit that poorly controlled diabetes mellitus, evidenced by increasing elevations in hemoglobin A1c, is associated with delayed wound healing and increased complications in burn patients.

Methods: The TriNetX Network, a database of 89 million patients across the U.S., was queried for diabetic patients with foot and ankle burns. Patients were divided into four groups based on A1c: properly controlled (<7%), moderately controlled (7-9%), poorly controlled (>9%), and propensity-matched non-diabetic controls. Evaluated outcomes included split-thickness skin grafting, infections, amputations, acute kidney failure (AKF), and mortality within one month of the burn.

Results: When comparing the poorly controlled A1c cohort with the properly controlled and moderately controlled A1c cohorts, we found a significant increase in amputations (p = 0.042) and cutaneous infections (p = 0.0438), respectively. When evaluating non-diabetics to diabetic patients, significantly increased rates of amputations (p < 0.0001), cutaneous infections (p = 0.0485), systemic infections (p = 0.0066), and AKF (p = 0.0005) were noted in the latter.

Conclusions: Poorly controlled diabetes shows a significant correlation with increased complications following foot and ankle burns, including amputations, infections, and AKF.

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