Experience With Biobrane: Uses and Caveats for Success

Objective: To present some of our experience with Biobrane™ (a total of 703 patients in 7 years) in a range of uses in burn practice and to illustrate the caveats that we have found applicable in maintaining our success with this versatile material. Methods: Retrospective analysis of theatre records, medical notes, and photography database to categorize our experience with Biobrane. Thorough assessment of our surgical and nursing protocols (both literature and experience influenced) to identify caveats for successful use. Results: Pivotal steps are revealed in wound selection, wound preparation, material application, dressing, and subsequent nursing care that have led to overwhelming success in definitive management of superficial partial thickness to middermal burns (ensuring pain relief, allowing early mobilization, tolerance of dressing changes and therapy, and earlier hospital discharge). Its many uses in a broad range of common burn situations are demonstrated and tips provided to achieve best outcome. Conclusions: Biobrane is not a panacea but it is extremely versatile. The different potential uses have learning curves, and suggestions are provided to flatten these.

[1]  W. A. Phillips,et al.  Uses and abuses of a biosynthetic dressing for partial skin thickness burns. , 1989, Burns : journal of the International Society for Burn Injuries.

[2]  R. Demling Use of Biobrane in management of scalds. , 1995, The Journal of burn care & rehabilitation.

[3]  D J Smith,et al.  Use of Biobrane in wound management. , 1995, The Journal of burn care & rehabilitation.

[4]  J. Hunt,et al.  Biosynthetic skin substitute versus frozen human cadaver allograft for temporary coverage of excised burn wounds. , 1987, The Journal of trauma.

[5]  L. Phillips,et al.  Therapeutic efficacy of Biobrane in partial- and full-thickness thermal injury. , 1986, Surgery.

[6]  J. Hansbrough Use of Biobrane for extensive posterior donor site wounds. , 1995, The Journal of burn care & rehabilitation.

[7]  E. A. Woodroof The Search for an Ideal Temporary Skin Substitute: AWBAT , 2009, Eplasty.

[8]  R. Demling,et al.  Management of partial thickness facial burns (comparison of topical antibiotics and bio-engineered skin substitutes). , 1999, Burns : journal of the International Society for Burn Injuries.