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Comparing the outcome of traditional incision and drainage with a larger skin incision with or without gauze packing of cutaneous abscess in pediatrics versus a new minimally invasive incision and drainage with two small incisions and a vessel loop transversing the incisions to keep them open.
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This prospective randomized single blind clinical trial will be conducted in a suburban pediatric emergency department that treats approximately 29,000 patients per year. Patients between 0-17 years with a superficial skin or soft tissue abscess larger than 3 cm that would be appropriate for ED I&D and outpatient management will be screened for inclusion. Patients will be excluded if they are immunocompromised (taking chemotherapy, steroid or bioactive medications or having diabetes mellitus), require a subspecialist for drainage or require hospitalization. Subjects will be required to provide assent when age-appropriate, and parental consent will be obtained. The parent or guardian will need to be in the emergency department with the child to provide consent. Subjects will be randomized to be in either the traditional I&D arm or the minimally invasive vessel loop arm using numbered sealed envelops. Computer blocking will randomize these numbered envelopes. Inside the envelope there will be instructions to the treating physician as to which of two standard techniques should be employed.
Cultures will be obtained, if possible, from the abscess. Pain medication and sedation at the time of the I&D will be left to the discretion of the treating physician. Antibiotics will not be mandated, but allowed at the judgment of the treating medical team. All subjects will be given 2 prescriptions for analgesia at home. One for mild pain, ibuprofen; another for moderate or severe pain, acetaminophen with hydrocodone (either liquid or pills) will be given. Equipotent alternatives will be provided in case of medication allergy. Pain scores will be assessed using a ten point scale before and after the procedure and at 48 hour follow up. Data recorded at the first visit will include demographics (age, male/female), characteristics of the abscess, fever, duration of symptoms, history of prior abscess, antibiotics in the last month, and provision of antibiotics post-procedure.
All subjects will return to the ER in 72 hours and 1 week for a recheck. At the 3rd day visit, wound packing will be removed. Large cavities will be repacked at the discretion of the ED physician. Loops will be cut and removed at the 7th day visit unless significant cellulitis remains. If cellulitis remains after 7 days, additional visits/hospitalization would be set up at the treating doctors discretion. Given that failure of treatment is a possible event in any abscess drainage, even those not involved with this study, hospitalization or additional visits beyond the 2 included in the study, will be billed to the patient's family and/or insurance company as any visit to the ER or hospital admission.
Patients and families will also be contacted at one month via telephone interview. Self-rated cosmetic outcome will be assessed using a 10 point scale from worst to best looking scar.
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3 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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