Abstract
Transplanted free skin flaps are often needed to treat deep burns; their survival, however, is less than optimal. This study examined whether local low-dose insulin injections can promote flap survival and wound healing after surgery. A total of 165 patients who underwent free skin flap transplantation for simple deep burns were enrolled in the study and divided into 5 groups of 33 patients each: Blank control group (no local subcutaneous drug injections), saline control group (saline injections), low-dose insulin group (0.5 units regular insulin injections), medium-dose group (1.0 units regular insulin injections) and high-dose group (2.0 units regular insulin injections). Wound healing and flap survival conditions were assessed and compared among groups. The best wound healing rate found was that of the low-dose insulin injection group where all the parameters measured improved significantly: The healing time was shorter; the blood flow volume, the flap survival, the number of fibroblasts and new vessels increased; the re-epithelialization occurred faster; the infiltration of inflammatory cells was reduced; the expression levels of heat shock protein-90, vascular endothelial growth factor, transforming growth factor-β and interleukin-1 were higher; and the plasma glucose levels only fluctuated slightly. The results clearly demonstrate that a local low-dose insulin regime after flap transplantation can accelerate the healing time and improve the surgical outcome without exerting detrimental secondary effects on the glucose plasma level of deep burn patients.
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