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The Use of Split-Thickness Skin Grafts on Diabetic Foot Ulcerations: A Literature Review
Author(s) -
Brant L. McCartan,
Thanh Dinh
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
plastic surgery international
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2090-147X
pISSN - 2090-1461
DOI - 10.1155/2012/715273
Subject(s) - medicine , skin grafting , contraindication , diabetic foot , surgery , treatment modality , modalities , wound closure , wound healing , therapeutic modalities , foot (prosody) , diabetes mellitus , pathology , social science , linguistics , philosophy , alternative medicine , sociology , endocrinology
Diabetic foot ulcerations are historically difficult to treat despite advanced therapeutic modalities. There are numerous modalities described in the literature ranging from noninvasive topical wound care to more invasive surgical procedures such as primary closure, skin flaps, and skin grafting. While skin grafting provides faster time to closure with a single treatment compared to traditional topical wound treatments, the potential risks of donor site morbidity and poor wound healing unique to the diabetic state have been cited as a contraindication to its widespread use. In order to garner clarity on this issue, a literature review was undertaken on the use of split-thickness skin grafts on diabetic foot ulcers. Search of electronic databases yielded four studies that reported split-thickness skin grafts as definitive means of closure. In addition, several other studies employed split-thickness skin grafts as an adjunct to a treatment that was only partially successful or used to fill in the donor site of another plastic surgery technique. When used as the primary closure on optimized diabetic foot ulcerations, split-thickness skin grafts are 78% successful at closing 90% of the wound by eight weeks.

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