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Determination of wound strength for quantitation of skin damage after pressure ischemia. An experimental study in rabbits

Author

Summary, in English

Rabbits skin folds were placed in plexiglass chambers enabling control of the skin fold temperature during cuff compression (200 mmHg) for 4 hours. In 10 animals the skin folds were kept at 36 degrees C - in another 10 animals the skin fold temperature was lowered to 10 degrees C. To quantitate the skin injury caused by the pressure ischemia a standardized wound was made, and immediately closed, after release of pressure. Control wounds were made in normal skin. Seven days later the mechanical strength of the wounds was tested by determination of breaking load. There was no significant difference in breaking load between the wounds made in normal skin and in the skin folds kept at 10 degrees C, whereas the breaking loads was significantly decreased in the wounds made in skin folds kept at 36 degrees C, i.e. normal skin temperature, compared with the controls. Thus, the results show that cooling may preserve the reparative capacity in skin subjected to pressure ischemia. It is assumed that this effect is related to a lowered cell metabolism during the ischemia. It may also be concluded that the pressure (mechanical) injury, being the same in both temperature groups, is less important than the ischemic injury.

Publishing year

1981

Language

English

Pages

93-95

Publication/Series

Scandinavian Journal of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery

Volume

15

Issue

2

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Topic

  • Medical Biotechnology

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 0036-5556