Abstract
Pressure sores remain a common health problem, particularly among the physically limited or bedridden elderly, and can cause significant morbidity and mortality. This study aimed to present our surgical treatment and strategy for patients with multiple pressure sores. Between January 2010 and December 2016, 18 patients were enrolled. After adequate debridement, pressure sores were managed based on our treatment protocol. Patients' age, aetiology, defect size and location, flap reconstruction, outcome, and follow-up period were reviewed. A total of 10 men and 8 women (average age, 82.3 years) with a mean follow-up period of 28.3 months (6-72 months) were included. The mean defect area was 63.7 cm2 . The most common aetiology of the bedridden state was cerebrovascular accident (38.89%), and the most frequent sores were trochanteric pressure sores (53.57%). The average operative time and blood loss were 105.5 minutes and 100.8 mL, respectively. No haemodynamic variation or blood transfusion was noted during the surgery. The complication rate for each sore was 10.7%, including late recurrence. In conclusion, treating pressure ulcers requires careful patient education, intensive multidisciplinary optimisation, and meticulous wound care, and our treatment protocol ensures a shorter surgery time, less bleeding, and low complication rate.
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