M. Muralidharan, S. Muthulakshmi, P. Sumitra, Arunshreenivas Arunshreenivas
{"title":"FLAP CAPILLARY BLOOD GLUCOSE MONITORING AS A PREDICTOR OF FLAP SURVIVAL IN LIMBERG FLAP FOR PILONIDAL SINUS SURGERY.","authors":"M. Muralidharan, S. Muthulakshmi, P. Sumitra, Arunshreenivas Arunshreenivas","doi":"10.36106/ijar/5901191","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Background: Pilonidal sinus is treated with wide local excision and primary closure, which carries high recurrence,\npost-operative morbidity and cosmetic implications. In order to overcome that limberg transposition ap is done. Postoperative ap survival is crucial for proper healing. Hence there is a need for a tool to predict ap survival as earliest. Flap capillary blood glucose\nmonitoring is such a tool which is, done as a clinical basic procedure, with no harm to patient or the ap. To prospectively validate ap Methods:\ncapillary blood glucose monitoring serially, as an indicator to predict ap survival in limberg ap in pilonidal sinus surgery patients at\nGovernment medical college & ESI hospital-general surgery department. Conducted as a prospective cohort study among 30 patients who\nunderwent wide local excision and limberg ap for pilonidal sinus in the Department of General Surgery, Government Medical College & ESI\nHospital between June- 2021 to November- 2021. Estimated capillary blood glucose at the edge of ap 3mm away from incision site, using\nglucometer at 0, 6, 24- hours following surgery. Of the 30 patients who underwent limberg ap surge Results: ry, 1 patient developed\npostoperative ap necrosis due to venous thrombosis. 1 patient developed ap infection which was treated with appropriate antibiotics after\nculture and sensitivity and the ap survived. Rest of the 28 patients had healthy aps and uneventful postoperative period. Of the 30 patients who\nunderwent limberg ap for pilonidal sinus 29 patients in whom the ap survived had ap glucose level more than 62mg/dl, in the rst 24 hours.\nConclusion: Monitoring ap capillary blood glucose serially in postoperative period in order to identify the aps in risk, to start early goal\ndirected therapy to improve ap survival and the patients can benet. This simple and cheap technique can be used for routine monitoring of\nLimberg aps along with the routine clinical evaluation.","PeriodicalId":13502,"journal":{"name":"Indian journal of applied research","volume":"43 12","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-04-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Indian journal of applied research","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.36106/ijar/5901191","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Pilonidal sinus is treated with wide local excision and primary closure, which carries high recurrence,
post-operative morbidity and cosmetic implications. In order to overcome that limberg transposition ap is done. Postoperative ap survival is crucial for proper healing. Hence there is a need for a tool to predict ap survival as earliest. Flap capillary blood glucose
monitoring is such a tool which is, done as a clinical basic procedure, with no harm to patient or the ap. To prospectively validate ap Methods:
capillary blood glucose monitoring serially, as an indicator to predict ap survival in limberg ap in pilonidal sinus surgery patients at
Government medical college & ESI hospital-general surgery department. Conducted as a prospective cohort study among 30 patients who
underwent wide local excision and limberg ap for pilonidal sinus in the Department of General Surgery, Government Medical College & ESI
Hospital between June- 2021 to November- 2021. Estimated capillary blood glucose at the edge of ap 3mm away from incision site, using
glucometer at 0, 6, 24- hours following surgery. Of the 30 patients who underwent limberg ap surge Results: ry, 1 patient developed
postoperative ap necrosis due to venous thrombosis. 1 patient developed ap infection which was treated with appropriate antibiotics after
culture and sensitivity and the ap survived. Rest of the 28 patients had healthy aps and uneventful postoperative period. Of the 30 patients who
underwent limberg ap for pilonidal sinus 29 patients in whom the ap survived had ap glucose level more than 62mg/dl, in the rst 24 hours.
Conclusion: Monitoring ap capillary blood glucose serially in postoperative period in order to identify the aps in risk, to start early goal
directed therapy to improve ap survival and the patients can benet. This simple and cheap technique can be used for routine monitoring of
Limberg aps along with the routine clinical evaluation.