首页> 外文期刊>Journal of burn care & research: official publication of the American Burn Association >Hypertrophic Scar Severity at Autograft Sites Is Associated With Increased Pain and Itch After Major Thermal Burn Injury
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Hypertrophic Scar Severity at Autograft Sites Is Associated With Increased Pain and Itch After Major Thermal Burn Injury

机译:自体移植遗址的肥厚瘢痕严重程度与主要热烧伤后的疼痛和瘙痒增加有关

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Approximately three quarters of major thermal burn injury (MThBI) survivors suffer from hypertrophic scarring (HTS) and over half experience chronic pain or itch. In survivors of MThBI, HTS and chronic pain or itch are considered one of the greatest unmet challenges of postburn injury care and psychosocial reintegration. Although scarring, itch, and pain have been clinically associated, there are no prospective, multisite studies examining tissue autograft site pain or itch and scar outcomes. The authors collected a representative cohort (n = 56) of MThBI survivors who received autografting within 14 days of injury and evaluated graft-site pain or itch severity (0-10 Numeric Rating Scale) and HTS using a validated scar photograph assessment scale 6 months following MThBI. Given that stress is known to influence wound healing, the authors also assessed the relationship between previous trauma exposure, peritraumatic stress, preburn overall health (SF-12), scarring, and chronic pain or itch severity using Spearman's correlation. Association between HTS and chronic pain or itch was significant in a linear regression model adjusted for age, sex, and ethnicity (beta = 0.2, P = .033 for pain, beta = 0.2, P = .019 for itch). Results indicate that prior trauma exposure is inversely correlated (r = -.363, P = .030) with scar severity, but not pain or itch severity 6 months after MThBI. Study results suggest that preburn chronic pain or itch is associated with pathological scarring 6 months following MThBI. Results also indicate that stress may improve scarring after MThBI. Further work to understand the mechanisms that underlie both HTS and chronic pain or itch and their relationship to chronic stress is critical to the development of novel therapies to assist burn survivors recover.
机译:大约四分之三的主要热烧伤损伤(MTHBI)幸存者患有肥厚疤痕(HTS)和超过一半的经验慢性疼痛或瘙痒。在MTHBI的幸存者中,HTS和慢性疼痛或瘙痒被认为是出版物伤害和心理社会重返社会的最大未满足的挑战之一。虽然疤痕,瘙痒和疼痛已经临床关联,但没有前瞻性,多能研究检查组织自体位疼痛或瘙痒和疤痕结果。作者收集了代表性队列(n = 56)的Mthbi幸存者,在损伤后14天内接受自身的自身吸入,并使用经过验证的疤痕照片评估规模评估接枝遗传疼痛或瘙痒严重程度(0-10个数字评定量表)和HTS遵循Mthbi。鉴于众所周知,应力影响伤口愈合,作者还通过Spearman的相关评估了先前创伤暴露,哌鲁姆暴露,额外胁迫,预燃烧整体健康(SF-12),疤痕和慢性疼痛或瘙痒严重程度之间的关系。 HTS和慢性疼痛或瘙痒之间的关联在调整年龄,性别和种族(Beta = 0.2,P = 0.2,P = 0.2,P = 0.2,P = .019用于瘙痒的线性回归模型中显着。结果表明,先前的创伤暴露与瘢痕严重程度相反(r = -.363,p = .030),但在MTHBI后6个月,不疼痛或瘙痒严重程度。研究结果表明,预燃料慢性疼痛或瘙痒与MTHBI后6个月的病理疤痕有关。结果还表明,应力可以在MTHBI后改善瘢痕形成。进一步努力了解HTS和慢性疼痛或瘙痒的机制以及它们与慢性应激的关系对新疗法的发展至关重要,以帮助烧伤幸存者恢复。

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