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About
Burns represent one of the most severe and dreaded traumas. Burned and traumatized tissue is known as eschar. The dead eschar, if not removed, often becomes heavily contaminated and is the source of local and/or systemic infection or sepsis. The local inflammation and infection destroy healthy surrounding tissues and extends the original damage. In order to prevent these complications, and in order to minimize the risk of infection, it is imperative to evaluate the burn and remove all of the offending eschar at the earliest possible opportunity. This removal of dead tissue is termed "debridement".
The most direct debridement method for eschar removal is surgery. Traditional, conservative non-surgical debridement is a lengthy process which often involves many complications.
The objectives of this study are as follows:
Full description
on-going recruitment, children and adults
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Males and females between 2 years and 55 years of age,
Thermal burns caused by fire/flame, scalds or contact,
Burn composition must be as follows:
All the partial and full thickness burn wounds must receive study treatment except facial, genital or perineal burns (Exclusion Criteria #5 and #6 below),
Total burn wounds ≤ 30% TBSA,
Hospital admission within 24 hours of the burn injury. Patients transferred from another hospital/clinic may be enrolled if the primary admission was within 24 hours of the burn injury and admission to the burn unit participating in the study was within 48 hours of the burn injury,
Signed written informed consent.
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
36 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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