Abstract
The purpose of this study was to investigate the use of subcutaneous injection of burn wounds and skin graft donor sites with an adrenaline-saline solution to reduce blood loss during burn surgery. This retrospective study reviewed the requirements of blood products in 30 randomly selected adult patients with more than 10% body area burned, who had at least one burn operation at a university regional burn center, between January 1991 and June 1997. Patients were matched by age and percent body area burned and stratified according to the surgical technique in two groups. In Group 1, 15 patients received the modified tumescent surgical technique: subcutaneous injection of adrenaline (1 part/million in warm saline solution) into the subcutaneous tissue of the donor sites for autologous skin graft and areas of burn eschar to be excised, combined with pneumatic tourniquets in extremities and saline-adrenaline soaked nonadherent pads. In Group 2, 15 patients received the traditional surgical technique: soaked gauze compresses with an adrenaline-thrombin solution (1 ml of 1:1,000 adrenaline, thrombin 10,000 units, and 1 L of normal saline). Outcome measures, transfusion of blood products, operating time and complications between the two patient groups were analyzed using the Wilcoxon 2-sample test. The two patient groups were not different by age (40.4 +/- 19.4 vs 38.9 +/- 17.9), percent total body area burned (27.6 +/- 15.4 vs 32.8 +/- 13.4), or percent full thickness burn (7.0 +/- 8.5 vs 11.5 +/- 8.5). The modified tumescent surgical technique significantly reduced mean total blood units transfused per patient (7.9 +/- 11.5 vs 15.7 +/- 12.9 units; P = .031), and the mean blood units transfused intraoperatively per patient (4.7 +/- 7.8 vs 8.9 +/- 8.0 units; P = .026). The modified tumescent surgical technique significantly reduced the intraoperative and total blood transfusion requirements in our thermally injured patients.
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