College of Health, Wellbeing and Life Sciences, Sheffield Hallam University, Sheffield S10 2BP, South Yorkshire, UK.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2020 Nov 23;17(22):8693. doi: 10.3390/ijerph17228693.
Caesarean section (CS) is the most prevalent surgical procedure in women. The incidence of surgical site infection (SSI) after CS remains high but recent observations of CS wounds using infrared thermography has shown promise for the technique in SSI prognosis. Although thermography is recognised as a 'surrogate' of skin perfusion, little is known of the relationship between skin temperature and skin perfusion in the context of wound healing. To assess the extent of literature regarding the application of infrared thermography and mapping of abdominal cutaneous perfusion after CS. Wide eligibility criteria were used to capture all relevant studies of any design, published in English, and addressing thermal imaging or skin perfusion mapping of the abdominal wall. The CINAHL and MEDLINE databases were searched, with two independent reviewers screening the title and abstracts of all identified citations, followed by full-text screening of relevant studies. Data extraction from included studies was undertaken using a pre-specified data extraction chart. Data were tabulated and synthesised in narrative format. : From 83 citations identified, 18 studies were considered relevant. With three additional studies identified from the reference lists, 21 studies were screened via full text. None of the studies reported thermal imaging and cutaneous perfusion patterns of the anterior abdominal wall. However, two observational studies partially met the inclusion criteria. The first explored analysis methodologies to 'interrogate' the abdominal thermal map. A specific thermal signature ('cold spots') was identified as an early 'flag' for SSI risk. A second study, by the same authors, focusing on obesity (a known risk factor for SSI after CS) showed that a 1 °C lower abdominal skin temperature led to a 3-fold odds of SSI. There is a significant gap in knowledge on how to forewarn of wound complications after CS. By utilising the known association between skin temperature and blood flow, thermographic assessment of the wound and adjacent thermal territories has potential as a non-invasive, independent, imaging option with which to identify tissue 'at risk'. By identifying skin 'hot' or 'cold' spots, commensurate with high or low blood flow regions, there is potential to shed light on the underlying mechanisms leading to infective and non-infective wound complications.
剖宫产术 (CS) 是女性最常见的手术。CS 后手术部位感染 (SSI) 的发生率仍然很高,但最近使用红外热成像观察 CS 伤口显示出该技术在 SSI 预后方面的前景。尽管热成像被认为是皮肤灌注的“替代物”,但对于伤口愈合过程中皮肤温度与皮肤灌注之间的关系知之甚少。 评估关于红外热成像应用和 CS 后腹部皮肤灌注映射的文献范围。 使用广泛的纳入标准来捕获所有设计的相关研究,以英文发表,并解决腹壁的热成像或皮肤灌注映射。搜索 CINAHL 和 MEDLINE 数据库,由两名独立评审员筛选所有确定引用的标题和摘要,然后对相关研究进行全文筛选。使用预先指定的数据提取图表从纳入的研究中提取数据。数据以叙述格式进行制表和综合。:从 83 条引文确定了 18 项相关研究。从参考文献中还确定了另外 3 项研究,通过全文筛选了 21 项研究。没有一项研究报告了前腹壁的热成像和皮肤灌注模式。然而,有两项观察性研究部分符合纳入标准。第一项研究探索了“询问”腹部热图的分析方法。特定的热特征(“冷点”)被确定为 SSI 风险的早期“标志”。同一作者的第二项研究侧重于肥胖(CS 后 SSI 的已知危险因素),表明腹部皮肤温度低 1°C,SSI 的几率增加 3 倍。 对于如何预警 CS 后伤口并发症,知识存在重大差距。通过利用皮肤温度与血流之间的已知关联,对伤口和相邻热区进行热成像评估具有作为一种非侵入性、独立的成像选择的潜力,可以识别“有风险”的组织。通过识别与高或低血流区域对应的皮肤“热”或“冷”点,有可能揭示导致感染性和非感染性伤口并发症的潜在机制。