针对糖尿病、高血压和肥胖患者的负压伤口灌注治疗——当指南治疗不够时:一个病例系列和ANSWER评分建议

IF 5.8 1区 医学 Q1 EMERGENCY MEDICINE
Orestis Ioannidis, Elissavet Anestiadou, Konstantinos Zapsalis, Konstantinos Siozos, Ourania Kerasidou, Savvas Symeonidis, Stefanos Bitsianis, Manousos-Georgios Pramateftakis, Efstathios Kotidis, Ioannis Mantzoros, Konstantinos Angelopoulos, Barbara Driagka, Angeliki Cheva, Stamatios Angelopoulos
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在微循环受损的情况下,伤口愈合是具有挑战性的,导致伤口慢性,生活质量下降,发病率增加。由于微循环受损,手术部位感染(ssi)对糖尿病、高血压和肥胖患者构成了重大挑战。负压伤口治疗(NPWT)是一种广泛应用于伤口治疗的辅助手段,但其在该亚组中的最佳参数仍不确定。考虑到组织灌注状态和组织愈合新策略的潜在益处,量身定制的管理是必不可少的。我们报告了3例伴有2型糖尿病和动脉高血压的肥胖患者,他们在腹部手术后发生了严重的ssi,扩大皮瓣活动,并采用定制的NPWT策略进行管理,包括降低负压,NPWT滴注和滞留时间(NPWTi-d),网状开孔泡沫敷药(ROCF-CC)和超声辅助伤口清创(UAW)。基于这些病例,我们提出了ANSWER评分(tAilored Negative presSure Wound thErapy in微血管病变)来优化NPWT压力设置。在患者1中,使用银敷料的NPWT在-125 mmHg的持续压力下开始,但在发生大面积坏死后,负压降至-50 mmHg。在患者2和3中,连续NPWT设置为-50 mmHg,这是所使用系统可用负压范围的较低值,导致坏死区域明显减少。每48-72 h更换一次敷料,所有患者均给予定向培养抗生素。我们的研究结果表明,NPWT的使用仍然是促进急性和慢性伤口愈合的基本因素。创新技术,如NPWTi-d、ROCF-CC和UAW清创,结合低负压水平,可能在微血管病变患者中获得最佳效果。微循环在伤口愈合中起着至关重要的作用,因为在组织灌注受损的患者(如糖尿病、肥胖或动脉高血压患者)中观察到愈合受损和组织再生率低。然而,在默认操作压力为-125 mmHg的微血管病变和广泛组织剥离患者中使用NPWT可能导致进一步的缺血性坏死。基于我们的病例系列,我们提出了一个临床评分(ANSWER评分-微血管病量身定制负压伤口治疗),作为反映微循环受损患者理想负压水平的有用工具。ANSWER评分给危险因素(肥胖、动脉高血压、糖尿病)分别打分,相应降低NPWT压力(从- 125 mmHg每分-25 mmHg)。基于ANSWER评分的量身定制的NPWT设置可能会提高微血管病变患者的伤口愈合结果。需要进一步的临床研究来验证这种方法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Tailored Negative Pressure Wound Therapy with instillation in diabetic, hypertensive, and obese patients-when guideline treatment is not enough: a case series and a proposal for the ANSWER score
Wound healing is challenging in cases of impaired microcirculation, leading to wound chronicity, decreased quality of life, and increased morbidity. Surgical site infections (SSIs) pose a significant challenge in diabetic, hypertensive, and obese patients due to impaired microcirculation. Negative pressure wound therapy (NPWT) is a widely used adjunct in wound management, but its optimal parameters in this subgroup remain uncertain. Tailored management is essential, taking into consideration tissue perfusion status and the potential benefit of novel strategies for tissue healing. We report a case seires of three obese patients with diabetes mellitus type 2 and arterial hypertension who developed severe SSIs after abdominal surgery, with extended flap mobilization and were managed with tailored NPWT strategies, including lower negative pressures, NPWT with instillation and dwell time (NPWTi-d), reticulated open cell foam dressings with through holes (ROCF-CC), and ultrasonic-assisted wound debridement (UAW). Based on these cases, we propose the ANSWER score (tAilored Negative presSure Wound thErapy in micRoangiopathy) to optimize NPWT pressure settings. In Patient 1, NPWT using silver dressings was initiated at a continuous pressure of -125 mmHg, but after extended necrosis developed, the negative pressure was reduced to -50 mmHg. In Patients 2 and 3, a continuous NPWT was set at -50 mmHg, which is the lower value of the available negative pressure range for the system used, resulting in significantly fewer necrotic areas. Dressings were changed every 48–72 h and culture-directed antibiotics were administered to all patients. Our findings suggest that the use of NPWT remains a basic element in promoting acute and chronic wound healing. Innovative techniques such as NPWTi-d, ROCF-CC, and UAW debridement, combined with low negative pressure levels, may achieve optimal results in patients with microangiopathy. Microcirculation plays a crucial role in wound healing, since impaired healing and a low rate of tissue regeneration have been observed in patients with compromised tissue perfusion, such as patients with diabetes, obesity, or arterial hypertension. However, the use of NPWT in patients with microangiopathy and extensive tissue dissection at the default operating pressure of -125 mmHg may lead to further ischemic necrosis. Based on our case series, a clinical score (ANSWER score- tAilored Negative presSure Wound thErapy in micRoangiopathy) is proposed as a useful tool that reflects the ideal level of negative pressure for patients with impaired microcirculation. The ANSWER score assigns risk factors (obesity, arterial hypertension, diabetes) a point each, reducing NPWT pressure accordingly (-25 mmHg per point from − 125 mmHg). Tailored NPWT settings, based on the ANSWER score, may enhance wound healing outcomes in patients with microangiopathy. Further clinical studies are warranted to validate this approach.
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来源期刊
World Journal of Emergency Surgery
World Journal of Emergency Surgery EMERGENCY MEDICINE-SURGERY
CiteScore
14.50
自引率
5.00%
发文量
60
审稿时长
10 weeks
期刊介绍: The World Journal of Emergency Surgery is an open access, peer-reviewed journal covering all facets of clinical and basic research in traumatic and non-traumatic emergency surgery and related fields. Topics include emergency surgery, acute care surgery, trauma surgery, intensive care, trauma management, and resuscitation, among others.
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