研究目的
To investigate if measurement of blood flow pulsatility, combined with perfusion measurement, can improve early assessment of burn depth using laser speckle contrast imaging (LSCI).
研究成果
Measurement of pulsatility improves the accuracy of the assessment of burns with LSCI and makes it possible to predict the need for surgery during day 0–2 after injury with a high accuracy.
研究不足
In many of the LSCI-recordings there were substantial motion artifacts which affect pulsatility measurement even more than absolute perfusion values. Blood pressure was not monitored during the recordings, which could be a source of error. The age range was quite large in the present study.
1:Experimental Design and Method Selection
Perfusion and pulsatility were measured with LSCI in 187 regions of interest in 32 patients, between 0 and 5 days after injury. The reproducibility of pulsatility was tested for recording durations between 1 and 12 s.
2:Sample Selection and Data Sources
Patients were recruited at the Department of Plastic Surgery, Hand Surgery and Burns at Link?ping University Hospital, Sweden. A total of 32 patients were included in the study.
3:List of Experimental Equipment and Materials
A laser speckle contrast imager (PeriCam PSI System, Perimed AB, J?rf?lla, Sweden) was used to measure perfusion.
4:Experimental Procedures and Operational Workflow
All clinical assessments and LSCI measurements were made by the first author at the time of the scheduled dressing changes at the burn unit, day 0–5 after injury. Perfusion and pulsatility were measured with LSCI.
5:Data Analysis Methods
Pulsatility was defined according to a specific algorithm applied to the perfusion recording. Receiver operator characteristics were created to find suitable pulsatility cut-offs to predict surgical need.
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