Department of Emergency Medicine, State University of New York, Downstate Medical Center, Brooklyn, NY, USA; Division of Pediatric Emergency Medicine, State University of New York, Downstate Medical Center, Brooklyn, NY, USA.
Department of Emergency Medicine, State University of New York, Downstate Medical Center, Brooklyn, NY, USA; Division of Pediatric Emergency Medicine, State University of New York, Downstate Medical Center, Brooklyn, NY, USA.
Am J Emerg Med. 2019 Jun;37(6):1184-1190. doi: 10.1016/j.ajem.2019.04.014. Epub 2019 Apr 11.
Partial thickness burns are the most common form of thermal burns. Traditionally, dressing for these burns is simple gauze with silver sulfadiazine (SSD) changed on a daily basis. Foam dressings have been proposed to offer the advantage of requiring less frequent dressing change and better absorption of exudates.
To compare the impact of silver-containing foam dressing to traditional SSD with gauze dressing on wound healing of partial thickness burns.
We performed a systematic literature search using PubMed, EMBASE, CINAHL, Web of Science, Cochrane Library database and Google Scholar for trials comparing traditional SSD dressings to that of silver-containing foam dressing on wound healing in partial thickness burns <25% of the body surface area. We excluded studies that enrolled burns involving head, face, and genitals; burns older than or equal to 36 h, non-thermal burns, and immunocompromised patients. Quality of trials was assessed using the GRADE criteria. The main outcome, complete wound healing, is reported as percentages of wound with complete epithelialization after the follow up period. Relative risks of complete healing are also reported with respective 95% CI. Time to healing and pain score before, during, and after dressing change at each follow up visit are compared between the groups (means with standard deviation or medians with quartiles).
We identified a total of 877 references, of which three randomized controlled trials (2 combined pediatric and adult trials and 1 adult trial) with a total of 346 patients met our inclusion criteria. All three trials compared silver-containing foam dressing to SSD and gauze on partial thickness burns. Moderate quality evidence indicated no significant difference in wound re-epithelialization between the groups across all three trials as confidence intervals for the relative risks all crossed 1. Although pain scores favored foam dressing at the first dressing change (7 days), there was no significant difference between the groups at the end of the treatment period at 28 days. Time to wound healing was also similar across the three trials with no statistical difference. Infection rates favored the foam-dressing group, but data were inconsistent.
Moderate quality evidence indicates that there is no significant difference in wound healing between silver-containing foam dressing and SSD dressing. However, foam has the added benefit of reduced pain during the early treatment phase and potentially decreased infection rates.
部分厚度烧伤是最常见的热烧伤形式。传统上,这些烧伤的敷料是简单的磺胺嘧啶银(SSD)纱布,每天更换一次。泡沫敷料被认为具有减少更换敷料的频率和更好地吸收渗出物的优点。
比较含银泡沫敷料与传统 SSD 纱布敷料对部分厚度烧伤创面愈合的影响。
我们使用 PubMed、EMBASE、CINAHL、Web of Science、Cochrane 图书馆数据库和 Google Scholar 进行了系统文献检索,检索比较传统 SSD 敷料与含银泡沫敷料对<25%体表面积部分厚度烧伤创面愈合的试验。我们排除了涉及头部、面部和生殖器的烧伤;烧伤时间大于或等于 36 小时、非热烧伤和免疫功能低下患者的研究。使用 GRADE 标准评估试验质量。主要结局是在随访期后完全上皮化的创面百分比。还报告了完全愈合的相对风险,以及各自的 95%CI。在每次随访时,比较两组之间愈合时间和疼痛评分(在更换敷料前、期间和之后的平均值±标准差或中位数±四分位距)。
我们共检索到 877 篇参考文献,其中 3 项随机对照试验(2 项联合儿科和成人试验,1 项成人试验)共 346 例患者符合纳入标准。所有 3 项试验均比较了含银泡沫敷料与 SSD 和纱布在部分厚度烧伤中的应用。中等质量证据表明,在所有 3 项试验中,两组之间的创面再上皮化无显著差异,因为相对风险的置信区间均跨越 1。尽管泡沫敷料在第一次更换敷料时(7 天)疼痛评分较高,但在 28 天治疗结束时,两组之间无显著差异。3 项试验的愈合时间也相似,无统计学差异。感染率有利于泡沫敷料组,但数据不一致。
中等质量证据表明,含银泡沫敷料与 SSD 敷料在创面愈合方面无显著差异。然而,泡沫敷料在早期治疗阶段具有减轻疼痛和潜在降低感染率的额外益处。