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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Treating severe burns in a dog with maggots and fish skin grafts

By Dawson, Katherine A et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2021·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Management of severe burn injuries with novel treatment techniques including maggot debridement and applications of acellular fish skin grafts and autologous skin cell suspension in a dog.

Species:
dog
Behaviour & energyDogs

Plain-English summary

A 3-year-old American Bulldog suffered severe burns over half her body after a gasoline explosion. She had extensive burns on her back, legs, and face, which also affected her eyes. The dog was hospitalized for 78 days, where she received pain management and supportive care. Treatment included a combination of traditional surgery and innovative methods like maggot debridement, fish skin grafts, and her own skin cell suspension to help heal the wounds. Thanks to these treatments, she made a successful recovery.

People also search for: dog burn treatment · American Bulldog skin graft · maggot therapy for dogs

Abstract

CASE DESCRIPTION: A 3-year-old 27-kg female spayed American Bulldog with severe burn injuries caused by a gasoline can explosion was evaluated. CLINICAL FINDINGS: The dog had extensive partial- and full-thickness burns with 50% of total body surface area affected. The burns involved the dorsum extending from the tail to approximately the 10th thoracic vertebra, left pelvic limb (involving 360° burns from the hip region to the tarsus), inguinal area bilaterally, right medial aspect of the thigh, and entire perineal region. Additional burns affected the margins of the pinnae and periocular regions, with severe corneal involvement bilaterally. TREATMENT AND OUTCOME: The dog was hospitalized in the hospital's intensive care unit for 78 days. Case management involved provision of aggressive multimodal analgesia, systemic support, and a combination of novel debridement and reconstructive techniques. Debridement was facilitated by traditional surgical techniques in combination with maggot treatment. Reconstructive surgeries involved 6 staged procedures along with the use of novel treatments including applications of widespread acellular fish (cod) skin graft and autologous skin cell suspension. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: The outcome for the dog of the present report highlighted the successful use of maggot treatment and applications of acellular cod skin and autologous skin cell suspension along with aggressive systemic management and long-term multimodal analgesia with debridement and wound reconstruction for management of severe burn injuries encompassing 50% of an animal's total body surface area.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34843435/