Treatment of Burn Wound Infection Using Ultraviolet Light: A Case Report

Publication date: April 2013 Source:Journal of the American College of Clinical Wound Specialists, Volume 5, Issue 1 Author(s): Numra Abdul Aleem , Moaz Aslam , Mohammad Faizan Zahid , Arshalooz Jamila Rahman , Fazl Ur Rehman A 9 year old girl presented to us with complaints of fever and pain in burn wounds with deteriorating health for one month. According to Lund and Broder's chart, burns spanned the posterior trunk (13%), right arm (1.5%), left arm (1.5%), and buttocks (2.5%). The wounds showed improper healing. She had previously underwent split-thickness skin grafting, using skin harvests from thighs and antimicrobial therapy with vancomycin, fluconazole and colomycin with limited clinical improvement. Analgesia was administered. Blood cultures and tissue cultures from the burns indicated polymicrobial wound infection and sepsis, including methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus, Klebsiella pneumoniae and Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Despite broad-spectrum antibiotics, fever persisted and condition deteriorated. Antifungals were also administered with no clinical improvement. Eventually another split-thickness skin grafting was done to provide fresh grafts. In due course, ultraviolet light exposure, of wavelength 32–40 nm/W/cm2, was considered for treatment. In prone position, the wounds were exposed to ultraviolet phototherapy 6–8 h daily for 8 days. Eventually, wound healing and sepsis improved. Antibiotics were optimized and high protein diet was started...
Source: Journal of the American College of Clinical Wound Specialists - Category: Journals (General) Source Type: research