(Press-News.org) In the last few years, breast reduction procedures in the U.S. have become increasingly common. According to the American Society of Plastic Surgeons, nearly 100,000 breast reduction procedures were performed in 2020.
This procedure involves a high-tension T-Junction suture in which three incisions meet, forming the shape of a T. Larger breast reductions with longer incisions may have a higher risk of complications and wound healing problems at the T-Junction, which represent 13 to 39% of wound breakdown. It’s known that decreased blood flow to the wound, which then reduces the amount of oxygen to the area, promotes wound breakdown.
Looking to improve tissue oxygenation in the T-junction suture, researchers at Baylor College of Medicine tested a device that would be applied on the suture to provide continuous diffusion of oxygen. The results of this pilot clinical trial published in the Journal of Surgical Research, show that this home-based therapy is safe, easy to use and well accepted by patients, and it significantly increased tissue oxygenation when compared to traditional care.
“The primary goal of our study was to determine whether the device that provided continuous diffusion of oxygen would be easy to use and accepted by patients,” said first author Dr. Alejandro Zulbaran-Rojas, research assistant II in the Michael E DeBakey Department of Surgery.
Zulbaran-Rojas and his colleagues teamed up with Dr. Sebastian Winocour, associate professor of surgery and medical director of the plastic surgery faculty group practice at Baylor. Winocour also is section chief of plastic surgery at Baylor St. Luke’s Medical Center. Winocour performed bilateral breast reduction surgery on 19 participants. To evaluate the effect of continued oxygen perfusion, the surgeon placed on the T-junction a special dressing that is connected to a device that delivers oxygen 24/7 on one breast, and then covered it with a silicon sheet. For comparison in the same patient, the other T-junction suture was cared for using a standard procedure that included a skin adhesive.
Wound healing was assessed weekly after surgery. To measure the amount of oxygen in the wounds, the researchers used a near infrared spectroscopy camera that can detect oxygen up to 3mm inside the tissue.
After four weeks, there were no device-related adverse effects. The team was pleased to see that 84% of the participants had a positive attitude toward using the device, 78% perceived it as easy-to-use and 77% considered it useful. Furthermore, the wounds treated with the device had higher tissue oxygenation than the wounds that were treated with traditional care. However, although the researchers observed a trend toward fewer wound breakdowns in the breasts treated with the device compared to breasts treated with traditional care, there was no statistical difference between care methods in terms of preventing wound breakdown.
"One of the key strengths of this study lies in its practical approach, using a supplemental treatment that patients can administer themselves. In today's world, where health equity is paramount, this therapy is a potential game-changer," emphasized Dr. Bijan Najafi, professor of surgery at Baylor and senior author of the work. "It equips patients, particularly those in remote locations with limited healthcare access, to effectively manage their post-surgical recovery."
“We are encouraged by our findings,” Zulbaran-Rojas said. “Self-applied continuous diffusion of oxygen on the T-Junction was feasible, safe and acceptable in a small sample of patients undergoing bilateral breast reduction. In proper wound conditions, the device may enhance breast tissue oxygenation. Expanding the population sample would be ideal to determine whether increasing tissue oxygenation improves wound healing. Our team is exploring this possibility.”
Other contributors to this work include Rasha O. Bara, Myeounggon Lee, Areli Flores-Camargo, Ramkinker Mishra and Alastair Thompson, all at Baylor College of Medicine.
This work was supported in part by a grant from EO2 Concepts, Inc.
###
END
Optimizing tissue oxygenation in breast reduction surgery
2023-08-22
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Why childhood adversity impacts how a person’s behavior is judged
2023-08-22
It’s human nature to be judgmental. But why do we place less blame on someone, or give more praise, if we find out that person had a history of suffering in childhood? In a recent study, University of Missouri researchers discovered why someone’s childhood adversity influences how others judge their behavior.
The finding contributes to a growing body of evidence that suggests judgments of praise and blame are “asymmetrically sensitive” to certain types of information about someone’s life history, said Philip Robbins, associate professor and chair of the Department of Philosophy.
“In the case of negative or anti-social behavior, we ...
nTIDE August 2023 Deeper Dive: Employment landscape shifts to near all-time highs for people with disabilities
2023-08-22
East Hanover, August 22, 2023 — Since the COVID-19 pandemic, gains in the labor market for people with disabilities have been at near all-time highs. Expert speakers at last Friday’s nTIDE Deeper Dive Lunch & Learn Webinar provided results from an in-depth University of New Hampshire research study, which took a closer look at the unprecedented surge in employment-to-population ratio among most of the six disability subgroups identified by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). Possible driving factors behind this employment transformation were also explored.
nTIDE Deeper Dive Lunch & Learn Webinar is presented by Kessler Foundation ...
Steam condenser coating could save 460M tons of CO2 annually
2023-08-22
If coal and natural gas power generation were 2% more efficient, then, every year, there could be 460 million fewer tons of carbon dioxide released and 2 trillion fewer gallons of water used. A recent innovation to the steam cycle used in fossil fuel power generation could achieve this.
Researchers at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign have developed a coating for steam condensers used in fossil fuel steam-cycle generation that is made with fluorinated diamond-like carbon, or F-DLC. The researchers reported in the journal Nature Communications that this coating could boost the overall process efficiency ...
Study adds to evidence that Parkinson’s starts in the gut
2023-08-22
NEW YORK, NY--Ask any neurologist: Parkinson’s disease is a brain disorder. The conspicuous symptoms of Parkinson’s disease—uncontrollable tremors, slowed down motions, and the feeling that one’s feet are stuck to the ground—all stem from the loss of neurons in a region of the brain that helps control movement.
But many researchers believe that the neurodegenerative disorder may get started far away from the brain—in the gut—and years before the first neurological signs appear.
New findings by Columbia researchers David Sulzer, ...
Mapping methane emissions from rivers around globe reveals surprising sources
2023-08-22
Freshwater ecosystems account for half of global emissions of methane, a potent greenhouse gas that contributes to global warming. Rivers and streams, especially, are thought to emit a substantial amount of that methane, but the rates and patterns of these emissions at global scales remain largely undocumented.
An international team of researchers, including University of Wisconsin–Madison freshwater ecologists, has changed that with a new description of the global rates, patterns and drivers of methane emissions from ...
Neuroscientists create new resource to improve Alzheimer’s disease research models
2023-08-22
INDIANAPOLIS – A new study by Indiana University School of Medicine researchers uses more genetically diverse mouse models to study the accumulation and spread of abnormal tau protein deposits in the brain—a known sign of Alzheimer’s disease and several other neurodegenerative diseases. The study’s findings, recently published in the Journal of Experimental Medicine, could lead to better research models that improve understanding of how different genetic backgrounds influence neurodegenerative disease development and treatment needs.
“As ...
Glitter impairs growth of organisms with key roles in aquatic ecosystems, study shows
2023-08-22
A study conducted by researchers affiliated with the University of São Paulo (USP) in Brazil concluded that particles of glitter can hinder the growth of organisms at the base of aquatic ecosystems, such as cyanobacteria (blue-green algae), which play a key role in the biogeochemical cycles of water and soil, as well as being eaten by other organisms. An article on the study is published in the journal Aquatic Toxicology.
Ubiquitous in makeup, nail polish, holiday decorations, greeting cards, Carnival costumes and many other places, glitter sticks to skin and clothes and requires a lot of effort to remove. It is made up of microplastics, tiny particles ...
Mount Sinai study identifies most effective and safest outpatient labor induction methods, potentially reducing hospital stays and increasing hospital efficiency in use of resources
2023-08-22
Paper Title: Outpatient cervical ripening and labor induction with low-dose vaginal misoprostol reduces the interval to delivery: A systematic review and network meta-analysis
Journal: American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, July 2023
Authors: Joanne L. Stone, MD, MSHCDL, Professor and System Chair of the Raquel and Jaime Gilinski Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive Science at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai; Rachel Meislin, MD, Maternal-Fetal Medicine Fellow at Mount Sinai Hospital; and other coauthors.
Bottom Line: While prior research and analysis have evaluated methods of outpatient labor ...
NIH awards The Texas Heart Institute $1.14 million to develop a novel, first-in-class drug for atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease
2023-08-22
HOUSTON (Aug. 22, 2023) — The National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI) recently awarded The Texas Heart Institute® (THI) a two-year, $1.14 million grant to develop a novel, first-in-class drug to treat cardiovascular disease (CVD) as a significant improvement to current treatment regimens — specifically for adverse events arising from atherosclerosis.
Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death worldwide, with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) estimating that one person dies from CVD every 33 seconds in the United States, accounting for one in every five deaths in 2021.
CVD leads to heart ...
UT Health San Antonio, 7 collaborators garner $46 million from NIH to move discoveries into practice
2023-08-22
SAN ANTONIO (Aug. 22, 2023) — The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio (also called UT Health San Antonio) and seven regional collaborators will leverage $46 million from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) over the next five to seven years to translate scientific discoveries into therapeutic benefits for human health and well-being.
A key focus will be reducing health disparities among Mexican Americans, active military personnel and veterans.
William L. Henrich, ...