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Journal Article

Citation

Dalicho V, Straube T, Kelly K, Larsen B, Wünsch L, Lindert J. Innovative surgical sciences 2024; 9(2): 83-91.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2024)

DOI

10.1515/iss-2023-0066

PMID

39100719

PMCID

PMC11294304

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Deep thermal injuries are among the most serious injuries in childhood, often resulting in scarring and functional impairment. However, accurate assessment of burn depth by clinical judgment is challenging. Optical coherence tomography (OCT) provides structural images of the skin and can detect blood flow within the papillary plexus. In this study, we determined the depth of the capillary network in healthy and thermally injured skin and compared it with clinical assessment.

METHODS: In 25 children between 7 months and 15 years of age (mean age 3.5 years (SD±4.14)) with thermal injuries of the ventral thoracic wall, we determined the depth of the capillary network using OCT. Measurements were performed on healthy skin and at the center of the thermal injury (16 grade IIa, 9 grade IIb). Comparisons were made between healthy skin and thermal injury.

RESULTS: The capillary network of the papillary plexus in healthy skin was detected at 0.33 mm (SD±0.06) from the surface. In grade IIb injuries, the depth of the capillary network was 0.36 mm (SD±0.06) and in grade IIa injuries 0.23 mm (SD±0.04) (Mann-Whitney U test: p<0.001). The overall prediction accuracy is 84 %.

CONCLUSIONS: OCT can reliably detect and differentiate the depth of the capillary network in both healthy and burned skin. In clinical IIa wounds, the capillary network appears more superficial due to the loss of the epidermis, but it is still present in the upper layer, indicating a good prognosis for spontaneous healing. In clinical grade IIb wounds, the papillary plexus was visualized deeper, which is a sign of impaired blood flow.


Language: en

Keywords

burn depth assessment; burns thorax; optical coherence tomography; pediatric burns

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