Abstract

The excessively long operative time has been the greatest barrier to the success of transplanting postage-stamp auto- and allografts directly and piece-by-piece onto extensive burn wounds. To solve this challenge, the authors present a novel grafting modality, that is, the prefabricated-large-sheet grafting that moves the labor-intensive and time-consuming process of grafts-positioning before grafting and thereby markedly shortens the operative time. Twenty-one operations using the novel modality were performed on 11 patients with extensive deep burns. The grafting time using the novel modality was recorded and compared with that of the conventional piece-by-piece grafting. Eventually, the take rates of the two modalities were compared. All patients were healed and discharged. The average grafting time per unit area (100cm2) of prefabricated-large-sheet grafting and piece-by-piece grafting were (0.41±0.09) min and (7.46±1.07) min, respectively, and the difference is statistically significant(P<0.001). The average take rate of the prefabricated sheets was (85.43±6.14)% and that of the piece-by-piece transplanted grafts was (87.29±5.23)% and there is no significant difference(P>0.05). The prefabricated-large-sheet grafting significantly reduces the intraoperative grafting time while ensures uniformity of the skin grafts and secures good outcomes, thereby making the intermingled transplantation of postage-stamp auto- and allografts, which has been an excellent modality per se but limited to repair small residual wounds, now feasible to repair extensive deep burn wounds. It is worth wider understanding and application in the treatment of extensive deep burns.

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