View clinical trials related to Burns.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to investigate the efficacy of music therapy in assisting with the coping and adjustment of children of adults with major burns. The investigators hypothesized that there will be a significant decrease in anxiety levels between those children who participated in music therapy compared to non-participants.
The purpose of this study is to determine if the Thermogard™ central venous catheter can prevent hypothermia (defined as a core body temperature less then 36.0 °C) in severely burned patients who are undergoing surgery for debridement and grafting in the setting of reduced ambient room temperature.
This research is being done to increase knowledge about wound healing and different factors that may affect healing in burn patients.
The aim of the study is to compare results obtained with epidermal cell spray and classic skin grafting for epidermal replacement in acute burns
The purpose of this study is to determine if using a DERMAL LAYER under skin grafts: 1. will reduce scar formation of skin grafts 2. will reduce burn wound contractures 3. will improve functional outcome of joints requiring grafts Compare scarring outcome of Dermal products
Determine effectiveness of various antimicrobial solutions on burn wounds (infections, wound healing, length of hospital stay).
The purpose of the program is to study and characterize the outcome of burn injury with particular attention to improving the rehabilitation of burn survivors, including children. Various agents are assessed for effectiveness on long term burn outcome, such as growth hormone, oxandrolone, propranolol,ketoconazole, inhospital exercise and home exercise.
The primary objective is to compare the effectiveness of treatment with Sulfamylon® solution as the initial topical moist dressing over meshed autografts following the initial graft procedure on preventing graft loss in a prospective cohort of subjects versus a historical control group in a non-inferiority trial.
The research will be looking at patient outcomes for healing of donor sites after a split-thickness skin graft procedure for a burn or skin tissue loss. Donor site healing time, infection rate, cosmetic outcome, and patient's rating of pain will be compared between two donor site dressings, Glucan II and Aquacel Ag.
The purpose of this study is to prospectively evaluate whether the addition of continuous glucose monitoring to point-of-care (POC) glucometer monitoring improves glucose control.