ISBI 2014 Detailed Program Sunday 12 October 2014

ISBI 2014 Detailed Program
Sunday 12 October 2014
Room
Level 1 Room 2
Level 1 Room 8
0700 – 0730
Level 2 Room 3
Level 2 Room 2
ISBI Nursing Committee
0730 – 0800
ISBI Rehabilitation Committee
0800 – 0830
0830 – 0900
Data Repository Committee Meeting
0900 – 0930
0930 – 1000
ISBI Research Committee Meeting
1000 – 1030
1030 – 1100
ISBI 2014 Pre-Congress Workshop
ISBI Prevention Committee Meeting
1100 – 1130
ISBI Disaster Planning Committee Meeting
1130 – 1200
Caring for the Burn-Injured Patient – Beyond
48 Hours
Didactic Sessions
1200 – 1230
1230 – 1315
LUNCH BREAK
1315 – 1510
ISBI 2014 Pre-Congress Workshop
Caring for the Burn-Injured Patient – Beyond
48 Hours
Didactic Sessions
1510 – 1730
ISBI 2014 Pre-Congress Workshop
Caring for the Burn-Injured Patient – Beyond
48 Hours
Hands-on break out Sessions
1730 – 1745
Sunday 12 – Thursday 16 October 2014
Workshop concludes
Hilton Sydney Hotel • Sydney, Australia
19
Monday 13 October 2014
Room
Level 3 Ballroom
0800 – 0830
Opening Ceremony
0830 – 0900
Tanner-Boswick-Vandeput Prize
Presentation and Lecture
Session
Name
PRESIDENTIAL PLENARY: ISBI’s
Commitment to Global Burn Care
Moderators
Richard L. Gamelli (USA) and David
Mackie (Netherlands)
Level 4 Room 1
Level 4 Room 2
Level 4 Room 3
Level 4 Room 4
David Meddings (Switzerland)
Global burns: challenges
and opportunities
Rajeev Ahuja (India)
ISBI Partnership with Global Alliance
For Clean Cookstoves
0900 – 1000
Michael Serghiou (USA)
Caring for the Burn-Injured
Patient – Beyond 48 Hours: From
Concept to Delivery
Gretchen Carrougher (USA)
Caring for the Burn-Injured Patient
– Beyond 48 Hours: Evaluation and
Future Plans
1000 – 1030
MORNING TEA and EXHIBITION VIEWING
Session
Name
Symposium 1:
New Technologies in Burn Care
Symposium 2:
Preparedness for burn mass
casualty disaster
Young Investigators Prize Papers
Free Paper Session: Research 1
Free Paper Session: Nursing &
Burns Reconstruction 1
Chairperson
Naiem Moiemen and Jyrki Vuola
Lior Rosenberg
Folke Sjoberg (Sweden)
David Mackie (Netherlands)
David Meddings (Switzerland)
David Ahrenholz (USA)
Mosutafa Elmasry (Sweden)
Chris Parker (Australia)
Gretchen Carrougher (USA)
Professor Steve Wolf
New innovations: an overview
Professor Paul van Zuiljen
(Netherlands)
Scar assessment: what is reliable?
Dr Palmer Bessey (USA)
Our 9/11 experience and assessing
national facilities
866 – Shizhao Ji (China)
Transplantation of cryopreserved
micronized amniotic membrane
enhance diabetic wounds healing by
regulate local microenvironment
153 – Pius Agbenorku (Ghana)
Electrical burns: the trend and risk
factors in the Ghanaian population
515 – Deborah Bates (Australia)
Is there is a need for an
integrated national burn survivor
support strategy?
Professor Edward Tredget
(Cananda)
Future of scar management
Dr James Jeng (USA)
The formation of a functional net
218 – Chuan-An Shen (China)
Clinical study of repairing donor site
of thickness from cicatricial skin with
auto-scalp grafting
684 – Mansour Alghamdi (Australia)
Epigenetic modification in keloid scars
764 – Clare Batkin (Australia)
Hypertrophic scarring of skin graft
donor sites in burns patients:
Prevalence,||risk factors and current
scar management practices.
Professor Jun Wu (China)
Novel wound assessment
Dr Imrul Warsi (Bangladesh)
Burn mass casualty: lesson learned
from the worst blaze in the history
of Bangladesh
90 – Jiajun Tang (China)
492 – Cassandra Chong (Australia)
Development of a triple polymer
Effect of endothelial microparticles
generated by burn or LPS treatment on scaffold for skin tissue engineering
endothelial dysfunction
743 – Matthias Aust (Germany)
Combination of Needling and ReCell
for repigmentation of burn scars – pilot
study results
Dr Kenneth Burhop (USA)
Use of stem cells with skin substitutes
Dr Lior Rosenberg (Israel)
Preparing for burn mass casualties
383 – Mercy Negble (Ghana)
Rehabilitation of burn patients
admitted at Komfo Anokye
Teaching Hospital
356 – Alvin Chua (Singapore)
Evaluation of a xeno-free culture
system to expand keratinocytes
for potential||therapeutic use in
severe burns
595 – Mehmet Bozkurt (Turkey)
Current approaches and therapies in
burn scar modulation
573 – Pablo Pase (Brazil)
Amniotic membrane dressing in a
developing country burn unit
657 – Leila Cuttle (Australia)
Ensuring patients receive
adequate burn first aid treatment
through the||public-paramedichospital pathway
396 – Shu Ying Chang (Taiwan)
Reconstruction for long length, third
degree burn of single digit with
extended reverse dorsal metacarpal
artery flaps
834 – Amit Mukund Mulay (India)
Quality of life assessment for burn
survivors in India
949 – Robert Dinsdale
(United Kingdom)
Novel blood counter parameters in
burn injury
315 – Anita Boekelaar (Netherlands)
Evaluation of aftercare and problems
experienced in first year after burns
214 – Zjir Rashaan (Netherlands)
Non-silver treatment versus topical
silver agents in treatment of partial
thickness burn wounds in children: a
systematic review and meta-analysis
441 – Daria Dolotova (Russia)
Decision support system in the
delivery of care to children with
burn injury
839 – Rachel Kornhaber (Australia)
Qualitative research methodologies:
Rigorous, robust and systematic in
the||exploration of burns trauma
408 – Mohamed Eldardiri
(United Kingdom)
The use of Integra® and Matriderm®
in combination with autologous
cultured keratinocytes and fibroblasts
on microcarriers reduce wound
contraction in pig wound model
278 – Cora Roerhorst (Netherlands)
Family centered care
1030 – 1200
Professor Steve Wolf
Collagen Matrix: Structure and
Function – Translating to New
Opportunities
852 – Tze Wing Wong (Hong Kong)
Development and testing feasibility of
an educational DVD for the burn injury
patients and caregivers
1200 – 1230
1230 – 1300
Molnlycke Industry
Sponsored Symposium
Editorial Committee Meeting for
“Burns” Journal
1300 – 1330
1200 – 1330
LUNCH and EXHIBITION VIEWING. POSTER VIEWING LEVEL 4 FOYER
Session
Name
Symposium 3:
Psycho-social support for
burns patients
Symposium 4: Research in Burns – An Free Paper Session: Paediatrics 1
International Perspective on Research
and Development in Burn Care
Free Paper Session: Research 2
Free Paper Session: Burn wound
Management 1
Chairperson
Gretchen Carrougher and
David Mackie
Lee Cancio
Tony Sparnon (Australia)
Lourdes Santiso (Guatemala)
Peter Haertsch (Australia)
Junichi Sasaki (Japan)
Lisa Huisban (Indonesia)
Andrew Catley (Australia)
Gretchen Carrougher RN, MN
Introductions/Welcome
Hajime Matsumura, MD, DMSc, FACS
(Japan)
Present and future research in wound
healing and skin replacements
500 – Kathy Bicknell (Australia)
Changes in paediatric burn care: A
longitudinal review of a paediatric
burns unit
607 – Matt Fell (United Kingdom)
The reliability of objective burn
scar assessment in a compact and
affordable tool measuring colorimetry
and trans-epidermal water loss
806 – Moti Harats (Israel)
Characteristics of improvised explosive
device trauma casualties in the Gaza
strip: the Israeli experience
Nicole S. Gibran, MD, FACS
Use of burn-specific or general
psychosocial measures in research:
What should be used?
Shari Honari, RN, BSN (USA)
The role of the Research Coordinator
in burns
373 – Jacqueline Burgess
(Australia)
Hot beverage scalds: a simmering
paediatric public health issue
493 – Emma Gee Kee (Australia)
A randomised controlled trial of three
different burns dressings for partial
thickness burns in children
94 – Jonathan Hew (Australia)
The role of high protein diet in
skin formation
1330 – 1500
20
17th Congress of the International Society for Burn Injuries
ISBI 2014 Sydney
Monday 13 October 2014
Room
(continued)
Level 3 Ballroom
Level 4 Room 1
Level 4 Room 2
Level 4 Room 3
Level 4 Room 4
Rajeev B. Ahuja, MD
Reviewing quality of life outcomes in
burn patients in low-income countries
A/Professor John E. Greenwood
(Australia)
Development of a dermal matrix
product for use in burn patients
821 – Ramnandan Prasad
Chaudhary (Nepal)
Pediatric burns in Nepal: Facts
and challenges
556 – Vlad Illie (Australia)
One stage Integra in an animal skin
graft contraction model
261 – Roger Huckfeldt (USA)
Prevention of Strike-through
Contamination of Patient
Contact Surfaces
Dr Ivette L. Icaza R.
Use of a pre-operative teaching
manual for parents and older children
in a pediatric burn center: Early
evaluation findings
Naiem Moiemen, MB BCh, MSc, FRCS,
FRCSPS (UK)
Research in burns in the UK:
challenges and opportunities
136 – Mehmet Demircan (Turkey)
Reconstruction of severe burn injuries
of the face in children by using the
collagen-elastin matrix
302 – Denise Jacquemin (Belgium)
Acids and bases induced
cutaneous injuries: from evaluation
to decontamination
765 – Andrea C. Issler (Australia)
MRSA acquisition, transmission, and
impact on the outcome of severely
burnt patients at Concord Hospital
David Mackie, MD
Audience Q&A
Leopoldo C. Cancio, MD, FACS (USA)
Randomized controlled trials in burn
patients: do not resuscitate?
716 – Paul Di Giovine (Australia)
Seven year experience with Integra in
a paediatric population: 68 cases
104 – Dr Ayse Ebru Abali (Turkey)
Prediction of pressure ulcer risk in
burn patients during their prolonged
hospital stay by using Braden Scale
877 – Rae Johnson (Australia)
Microbial modulation comparing
two solutions with ultrasonic
assisted debridement: a longitudinal
randomised control trial on burn
wounds, grafts and chronic wounds
960 – Christina Duncan (USA)
Relation of burn-specific social
difficulties to burn severity &
traumatic||stress in pediatric
burn survivors
945 – Peter Hampson
(United Kingdom)
Reduced neutrophil function in
response to burn injury is associated
with mortality
829 – Fenella Halstead
(United Kingdom)
The antibacterial activity of acetic
acid against biofilming organisms of
relevance to burns patients.
403 – Dan Enescu (Romania)
Electrocutions in children
747 – Varun Harish (Australia)
Accuracy of burn size estimation in
patients transferred to adult Burn
Units in Sydney, Australia: an audit of
698 patients
29 – Xu Sheng Liu (China)
Study on the mechanism and its
accelerating role on burn wound
healing of murine BM-MSCs with upregulated microRNA134 expression
269 – Olga Filippova (Russia)
Interrelation of clinical, morphological
and immunohistochemical patterns
in pathological post-burn scars.
Classification and algorithm of
conservative treatment of scars
in children
771 – Yue-Sheng Huang (China)
Bradykinin B1 Receptor Induces
Increase of Organic Vascular
Permeability Following Severe Burn
849 – Gaoxing Luo (China)
Nitric oxide stimulates epidermal stem
cells migration via cGMP-mediated
signal transduction
228 – Dr Ayse Ebru Abali (Turkey)
Features of Contact-Burn Injuries in
Infants and Older Children: Clues for
Preventive Strategies
969 – Jun Wu (China)
Effective Symptomatic Treatment
for Severe and Intractable Pruritus
Associated with Severe Burn-induced
Hypertrophic Scars – A Prospective,
Multicenter, Controlled Trial in
74 Patients
652 – Hiromi Miyazaki (Japan)
Application of a biodegradable
nanosheet as a new dressing for
burn wounds
1330 – 1500
1500 – 1530
AFTERNOON TEA and EXHIBITION VIEWING
Session
Name
Symposium 5: Infection Control and
Wound Management
Symposium 6: Tissue Engineering/
Skin Substitutes
Free Paper Session: Paediatrics 2
Free Paper Session: Research 3
Free Paper Session: Burn wound
Management 2
Chairperson
Peter Dziewulski and James Jeng
Paul van Zuijlen and Fiona Wood
Kelly Waddell (Australia)
Yvonne Wilson (UK)
Michael Rudd (Australia)
Peter Lars Kamolz (Austria)
Di Elfleet (Australia)
Linwood Haith (USA)
Dr Bradbury
Infection Control in Burns and Design
of Burns Units
Nicole Gibran (USA)
Extensive single centre experience
with Integra
268 – Ela Hyland (Australia)
Prospective randomised controlled trial
comparing VersajetTM hydrosurgery
and conventional debridement in
paediatric burns
105 – John Edward Greenwood
(Australia)
The process of developing and
optimising a synthetic dermal scaffold
– the Biodegradable Temporising
Matrix (BTM)
795 – Markus Öhlbauer (Germany)
Enzymatic Debridement and Negative
Presssure Wound Therapy (NPWT)
Combined use in burned patient
Richard Nnabuko (Africa)
Infection Control in a Cost
Contained Environment
Zhe Li (Australia)
Tissue engineering of skin – Research
and development
293 – Madeleine Jacques (Australia) 194 – Lars-Peter Kamolz (Austria)
The use of telemedicine in burn
Haematomas under lower limb skin
care: Development of a mobile
grafts – is it a bloody issue?
system for TBSA documentation and
remote assessment.
532 – Jan Dokter (Netherlands)
Bacteriological cultures on admission;
to do or not to do, that’s the question
John Greenwood (Australia)
Where Does Burn Infection Come
From?
Naiem Moiemen (UK)
Skin substitutes – how does it work?
654 – Jessica Maskell (Australia)
Young people living with burn injury
and scarring: perceptions of self, social
interactions and experiences with
significant others
739 – Edgar Krötzsch (Mexico)
Clinical and histomorphological
assessment of wound repair in
mid-partial thickness burn wounds
treated with allogeneic keratinocyte vs.
silicone-collagen dressings
325 – Brian Burgess (USA)
To Brush or not to Brush: That is the
question. Oral Care in Intensive Care
and Burn Centers is Critical.
Richard Wong She (New Zealand)
The Role of Technology in Burn Sepsis
( Prevention / Diagnosis / Treatment)
Fiona Wood (Australia)
The use of cell based therapies
757 – Seema Menon (Australia)
Optimal time to skin grafting in
paediatric burns: a systematic review
200 – Becky Leung (Australia)
Are burns survivors at increased risk
of cardiovascular disease?
23 – Dustin Crumby (USA)
Carbapenem-resistant
Enterobacteriaceae (CRE) in a
burn center
Stuart Watson (UK)
Surgical Management of Burn
Wound Sepsis
Paul van Zuijlen (Netherlands)
Tissue engineering: the
other dimensions
766 – Carol Oliveira (Canada)
Toxic Shock Syndrome in Pediatric
Burns Registry (TSSPB Registry):
challenges and accomplishments
of setting up an international
disease registry
780 – Yeyang Li (China)
The role of integrin-linked kinase in
angiogenesis of hypertrophic scar
288 – Sharon Cuperus
An outbreak of multi-resistant
Pseudomonas aeruginosa in a burn
centre; tackling the problem
906 – Julia Sarginson
(United Kingdom)
The MISTIC Study – a prospective
observational study of the systemic
response to injury and outcomes of
small burns in pre-school children:
The first 150 children.
416 – Li Ma (China)
Effect and mechanism of dantrolene
on the skeletal muscle of rats with
severe scald injury
438 – Jonathan Dunne
(United Kingdom)
ReCell in Early Burns Surgery: A
Systematic Review of the Literature
742 – Helene Scheer (Switzerland)
Toxic shock syndrome in pediatric
burns – is the devil in the details?
777 – Mirriam Maimbo (Zambia)
Early delayed skin grafting of burn
wounds at university teaching hospital,
Lusaka, Zambia
205 – Mohammed Farid
(United Kingdom)
Does burn wound infection always
lead to hypertrophic scarring?
38 – Smitha Segu (India)
Pediatric suicidal burns: a
growing concern
724 – Loyola McLean (Australia)
Type D, ‘distressed’ personality
is associated with elevated
psychological||symptom levels in early
adjustment to burn injury in adults
72 – Eubenice Paz Gumasing
(Philippines)
A Comparison of Semi-Open Dressings
with Moist Exposed Burn Ointment
(MEBO) versus Standard Gauze
Dressings with Silver Sulfadiazine
in the Treatment of Filipino Patients
with Acute Superficial Partial
Thickness Burns
155 – Yaron Shoham (Israel)
Summary of pediatric clinical trial
experience with NexoBrid
74 – Abelardo Medina (Canada)
New therapeutic approaches
for heterotopic ossification in
burn patients
496 – Kellie Stockton (Australia)
Outpatient paediatric burn injury – a
missing part of the puzzle
1530 – 1700
1700 – 1800
BREAK
1800 – 2000
Welcome Reception – Level 3 Foyer
Sunday 12 – Thursday 16 October 2014
Hilton Sydney Hotel • Sydney, Australia
21
Tuesday 14 October 2014
Room
Level 3 Ballroom
Level 4 Room 1
Level 4 Room 2
Level 4 Room 3
Level 4 Room 4
Session
Name
Symposium 7:
Bone metabolism in Severe Burns
Symposium 8: Tissue engineering
and cultured skin
Free Paper Session: Burns
Reconstruction 2
Free Paper Session: Burns Allied
Health
Free Paper Session: Burns
Epidemiology 1
Chairperson
Gordon Klein and David Herndon
Hajime Matsumara and YoungChul Jang
Salathiel Mzezewa (South Africa)
Anne Darton (Australia)
Michael Serghiou (USA)
Chris Adams (New Zealand)
Tariq Iqbal (Pakistan)
Gordon Klein MD (USA)
Introduction
Young-Chul Jang (Korea)
The Clinical Experience of Burn
Management Using Cell Therapy in
Korea: Past and Present
201 – Junjie Chen (China)
Effect of angiotensin converting
enzyme inhibitor on collagen
metabolism in keloid fibroblast cells
457 – Donna Bennett (New Zealand)
Innovative strategies for postural
management in children with
burn injuries
649 – Opoku Ware Ampomah (Ghana)
Liquefied petroleum gas related burn
injuries. Experience from a burn unit in
an emerging oil and gas economy
David Herndon MD (USA)
Muscle and Bone Research in Burns
Saewha Jeon (Korea)
Cultured Cells for
Cutaneous Regeneration
446 – Shiow Shuh Chuang (Taiwan)
Effective deep fascia releasing in post
burn axillar scar contracture
426 – Eric Dantzer (France)
Epidermal and collagen_elastin dermal
equivalent in a one single step for 41
acute and post burn hands surgery.
617 – Cem Aydogan (Turkey)
Scald burns of the adults related to
hot water bags: An unusual cause of
scald burns
Gordon L Klein MD (USA)
How Burn Victims Lose Bone
Hajime Matsumara (Japan)
Japanese Experience of Using CEA in
Major Burns:
Results and Changes in 6 Years
245 – Marie Comhaire Valange
(France)
Comparative study using manual
massages or mechanical massages
with Ergolift on face and neck burns
658 – Martha Druery (Australia)
A two year review of burns
hospitalisations in Queensland: A
social determinants perspective
753 – Hsu Phie Chong (Australia)
The state of the union address:
Inpatient burns service at the Royal
Adelaide Hospital from 2009 to 2013
John Eisman MD (Australia)
Consequences of Post-’Burn Bone
Loss, Assessing Fracture Risk
Yosuke Ozawa (Japan)
JACE 6-Year Results
423 – Lieve De Cuyper (Belgium)
731 – Tiffany Grisbrook (Australia)
The effect of nanocrystalline
‘Scar Freeze’ : A feasibility study for
the effects of cryosauna on burn scars. silver dressings on Bioimpedance
Spectroscopy measurements
when monitoring fluid status in
burns patients
John Greenwood (Australia)
Composite Cultured Skin in a three
dimensional scaffold
277 – Moustafa Elmasry (Sweden)
Hand function deficits after burn – a
remaining problem in Egypt
547 – Belinda Kipping (Australia)
351 – Janine Duke (Australia)
Preparation and play technology
Burn injury, gender and cancer risk: a
to relieve anxiety in children
population-based study
undergoing||anaesthesia: A prospective
randomised controlled trial
447 – Mahmoud El-Oteify (Egypt)
Diagnosis of post burn syndactyle
708 – Cecilia Wai Ping Li-Tsang
(Hong Kong)
Clinical effectiveness of the smart
pressure-monitored suit (SPMS)
in management of post burn
hypertrophic scars
939 – Amy Fitzgerald (Australia)
Burns in the Elderly: an up-date
on trends in Western Australia and
optimising future management
470 – María Dora Espinosa (Chile)
Use of split-thickness skin grafts
in postburn contracture release in
extremities, at outpatient pediatric
surgery center in Santiago of Chile.
473 – Virginia Nunez (Mexico)
Experiences in 105 courses of
Advanced Burn Life Support (ABLS)
provider in Mexico
528 – Aparna Dasunmalee Ganhewa
(Australia)
Itch After Burn Injury: A Descriptive
Study of WA Burn Patients
536 – RuthAnn Fanstone
(United Kingdom)
The Impact of an International
Educational Program on Transforming
Practice and Outcomes in
Scar Management
625 – Raimo Palmu (Finland)
Social and occupational functioning,
disability and social adaptation among
survivors 6 months after burn injury
145 – David Greenhalgh (USA)
Hash oil burns: the new drugrelated epidemic
140 – Xiang Sheng Feng (China)
Clinical observation of acellular
xenogeneic (porcine) dermal matrix
therapy on||improvement of immune
function in severe burn patients
918 – Chandini Perera (Sri Lanka)
Effectiveness of early stretching
exercises for the quality of functional
recovery of the upper limb in burnt
patients admitted to the burns unit of
the National Hospital of Sri Lanka
940 – Nicholas Linklater (Australia)
A review of burns presentations to
Peninsula Health 2009-12
860 – Philip Fidler (USA)
Burn Survivors with disabilities return
to Leisure, a study of Adaptive Sport
355 – Anna Rumbach (Australia)
Speech-language pathology care
of the burn-injured patient: An
international perspective
370 – Lucy Lu (New Zealand)
Attributes of self-inflicted burns in the
New Zealand National Burn Centre
395 – Thilanee Gankande (Australia)
Reliability and validity of scar
assessments performed with an
integrated skin testing device – the
DermaLab Combo
366 – Kristina Stiles
(United Kingdom)
Burn care advisors: educational
liaisons for emergency trauma teams
968 – Marang Makepe (Australia)
A review of burns presentations to
Peninsula Health 2009-12
Peter Ebeling MD (Australia)
Perventing and Treating Post-Burn
Bone Loss
Steven Wolf MD (USA)
Managing bone loss in a burn
unit setting
0800 – 1000
65 – Ela Hyland (Australia)
General practitioner survey: giving the
people what they want
518 – Karl-Anton Harms (Australia)
Fractional carbon dioxide laser
treatment for burn-related
scarring: an evidence||up-date and
hypothetical mechanism
678 – Holger Moeller (Australia)
Inequalities in burn injuries between
Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal children
in||New South Wales, Australia
1000 – 1030
MORNING TEA and EXHIBITION VIEWING
Session
Name
Symposium 9:
Pediatric Burn Care
Symposium 10:
Nursing
Free Paper Session: Burns registries Free Paper Session: Research 4
and Outcome Measures 1
Free Paper Session: Burn wound
Management 3 and Paediatrics 3
Chairperson
Yvette Icaza and Ariel Miranda
Alette DeJong and Christine Parker
Yvonne Singer (Australia)
Patrick Kealy (USA)
Emin Turk (Turkey)
Joe Bessey (USA)
Tracie Petrie (Australia)
Rajiv Sood (USA)
Ramnandan Prasad Chaudhary
(Nepal)
Facts and challenges for proving
standard paediatric burn care in low
and middle income countries
Zachary Munn (Australia)
Journal Clubs in Burns: How they can
contribute to evidence-based practice
368 – Heather Cleland (Australia)
The Bi-National Burn Registry:
Improving surgical management
of major burns in Australia and
New Zealand
873 – Yexiang Sun (China)
Effect of 200 mEq/L hypertonic saline
resuscitation on intestinal injury in
severely burned rats
191- Lars-Peter Kamolz (Austria)
The use of Suprathel® in deep dermal
burns: 1-year follow-up results of a
prospective clinical trial
Tina Palmieri (Sacramento, E.U.A.)
Nutrition Standards in paediatric burn
care: How to get them?
Susan Taggart (Australia)
The trauma bubble: patient and family
experience of serious burn injury
578 – Dale Edgar (Australia)
Does transfer time to a specialist burn
service influence post-burn mortality
in Australia and New Zealand?
275 – Kuzhali Muthumalaiappan
(USA)
Burn injury impedes erythropoiesis
by limiting both erythrocyte
progenitors and erythroblast-island
forming macrophages in the bone
marrow niche
706 – Cheri Templeton (Australia)
Small burn – Big challenge
Mauricio Pereima (Brasil)
Acute paediatric burns surgery: What
to do?
Helma Hofland (Netherlands)
Determinants of burn pain
during hospitalization
187 – Steven Kahn (USA)
‘It happened in seconds’ firefighter
burn prevention program: evaluation of
a||’train the trainer’ course
922 – Eileen O’Halloran (USA)
Hepatic histone deacetylase 1
expression and activity following
ethanol exposure and burn injury
705 – Kelly Waddell (Australia)
Does Gabapentin reduce itch in
children with acute severe burns?- A
prospective||randomised doubleblinded controlled study
David Herndon (Galveston, E.U.A.)
Myths and controversies in paediatric
burn care
Rachel Kornhaber (Australia)
Adult burn survivors’ perceptions of
pain: an integrative review
683 – Nicole Leahy (USA)
Use of an existing web based platform
to support international remote
clinical mentorship
415 – Mauricio Pereima (Brazil)
Dermal Substitutes Support the Growth
of Human Skin-Derived Mesenchymal
Stromal Cells: Potential Tool for
Skin Regeneration
476 – Stephanie Wicks (Australia)
End of range splinting to prevent
contracture in paediatric axilla
burns – a 10 year review of practice
and outcomes
1030 – 1200
22
17th Congress of the International Society for Burn Injuries
ISBI 2014 Sydney
Tuesday 14 October 2014 (continued)
Room
1030 – 1200
Level 3 Ballroom
Level 4 Room 1
Level 4 Room 2
Level 4 Room 3
Level 4 Room 4
Gerard Beerthuizen (Netherlands)
Trying to make the right decision
between clinical and laboratory
findings in paediatric burn care
Gretchen Carrougher (USA)
Pain assessment: What’s
the difference!
517 – Sadhishaan Sreedharan
(Australia)
Accelerant related burn injuries in
Australia and New Zealand: An analysis
of the Bi-National Burns Registry
789 – Thea Price (USA)
Mutant Abcc6-/- mouse as a model
for heterotopic ossification following
thermal injury
886 – Christian Ottomann (Germany)
New evidenced based protocols in the
conservative therapy of superficial
partial thickness (IIa°) and deep
partial thickness (IIb°) burns
Ariel Miranda (Mexico)
Improving paediatric burn care in
developing countries
58 – Tina Palmieri (USA)
Predicting resource utilization in
burn treatment
362 – Nevra Seyhan (Turkey)
Saving the zone of stasis in burns
with melatonin: An experimental study
in rats
823 – Chris Parker (Australia)
An evaluation of the effect of Hydrogen
Peroxide Vapour decontamination
on patient healthcare acquired
infection rates and the reduction
of environmental contamination
with multi resistant organisms in a
specialised Burns Unit
Dr Dare Turene (Chile)
Child abuse and burns
521 – Helen DeJong (Australia)
159 – Yaron Shoham (Israel)
Validating the patients perception of their Admission cell free DNA as
a prognostic factor in burns:
burn injury
quantification by use of a
novel technique
31 – Sushma Sagar (India)
Morel lavelle lesions revisited : an
experience from tertiary care trauma
center ,new delhi india
735 – Vidya Finlay (Australia)
Increased time to healing is associated
with worse scar quality as measured
by the Vancouver Scar Scale
262 – Adam Singer (USA)
Long wave infrared imaging has
the potential to reduce unnecessary
surgery and||delays to necessary
surgery in burn patients
148 – Smitha Segu (India)
Randomized, double-blind, multicentric study to compare the efficacy
and safety||of Xylentra™ with Silver
Sulfadiazine in patients with partial
thickness burns
217 – Selina Khan (United Kingdom)
Are we seeing a new wave of
Methamphetamine-related burns in
Western Australia?
704 – Andrew Stevenson (Australia)
Epigenetic changes after burn injury: a
profile of human scar fibroblasts
1200 – 1300
Smith & Nephew Industry
Sponsored Symposium
1200 – 1330
LUNCH and EXHIBITION VIEWING. POSTER VIEWING LEVEL 4 FOYER
Session
Name
Plenary one:
Inhalation Injury: Is it the Problem?
Panel
Basil A. Pruit
Diagnosis of Inhalation Injury
David N. Herndon
Animal Models of Inhalation Injury
David P. Mackie
Ventilatory Support for Patients with
Inhalation Injury
John Fraser
Extracorporeal Support for Inhalation
Injury: ECMO and Beyond
Osamu Tasaki
Pharmacologic Therapy for
Inhalation Injury
William G. Cioffi, MD
Complications, Long-term Sequella,
and Outcomes of Inhalation Injury
1330 – 1530
1530 – 1545
AFTERNOON TEA and EXHIBITION VIEWING
Session
Name
Symposium 11: International Burns
Data Base
Symposium 12: Rehabilitation
Focus: Improving minor to
moderate burn injury outcomes in
any environment
Free Paper Session: Disaster
Management & Prevention
Free Paper Session: Psychology
Free Paper Session: Burn wound
Management 4
Chairperson
Richard Gamelli and Michael Peck
Dale Edgar
Siobhan Connolly (Australia)
Kuldeep Singh (India)
Rebecca Schrale (Australia)
Marie Claude Pelchat (Taiwan)
Luis Phillipe Vana (Brazil)
David Vogit (USA)
Peter Cameron (Australia)
Introduction to burn registries – Why
collect data?
Dr Mimmie Willebrand (SWE)
Return to work and leisure: Restoring
patient’s purpose and livelihood rapidly
after burn injury
838 – Xu-Lin Chen (China)
Pediatric deep burns caused by hot
incense ashes during 2014 Spring
Festival in Fuyang city, China
787 – Radha Holavanahalli (USA)
Perceived social support and quality
of life among survivors of major
burn injury
344 – David Voigt (USA)
xenograft is as effective as a human
fibroblast-derived temporary skin
substitute in the treatment of partial
thickness burns, and more economical
Michael Peck (USA)
Development of a minimum data set
for burns
Dr Dale Edgar (AUS)
The scar never sleeps: Influencing
patient’s activity and outcomes when
therapists are NOT there
666 – Jonathan Friedstat (USA)
Treatment of burn victims following
a nuclear weapon detonation: A
systematic review of the literature
124 – Pelchat Marie-Claude (Taiwan) 590 – Jyrki Vuola (Finland)
The life rehabilitation experience of burn Autologous keratinocyte spray to treat
survivors following a suicide attempt severe burns
Ron Price (USA)
Production and distribution of a
web-based data collection system with
reporting functions
Dr Ivette Icaza (USA)
Empowering therapists around the
world: ISBI Resources to train staff in
any environment
511 – James Hodgkinson (Australia) 295 – Lisa Martin (Australia)
Posttraumatic growth after burn injury
When is enough enough? Cumulative
in an Australian population
TBSA as a predictive tool in major
burns disaster planning.
204 – Britta Wallner (Germany)
Extensive use of Negative Pressure
Wound Therapy (NPWT) in severe
burned patients
David Meddings (Switzerland)
Laying the groundwork for burn
prevention in LMIC--Pilot testing of
data collection form emphasizing
cause of injury
Jon Niszczak (USA)
The support network for burn
therapists across the world is BORN
161 – Lior Rosenberg (Israel)
558 – Sarah McGarry (Australia)
The relationship between mental
The role of an effective, fast and
health and itch in burns patients
specific enzymatic debriding agent
(NexoBrid) in the care of mass burns in
a disaster scenario
783 – Oren Weissman (Israel)
Treatment of severe 2nd and 3rd
degree burns with Enzyme Alginogel
(Flaminal®) -Is there a ‘Jack of all
Trades’ for topical agents?
Ken Dunn (UK)
Challenges to burn registries in
the future – Experiences with the
International Burn Injury Database
Panel discussion:
Moderator: Dale Edgar and
Ingrid Parry
Panelist: Michael Serghiou,
Roux Martinez and Fiona Wood
Changing the Paradigm of Paediatric
Burn Rehabilitation in Developing
Burn Services
545 – Mehdi Ayaz (Iran)
The effect of education on the
prevention of electrical injuries
942 – Birgit Pfitzer (Australia)
Towards a new normality:
Recovery from burn injuries after a
major bushfire
785 – Oren Weissman (Israel)
Negatively charged polystyrene
microspheres for the treatment of
burns and problematic wounds of
different etiologies
513 – Bethany Farley (Australia)
Primary burns prevention and first aid
education does it work?
286 – Anthony Sparnon (Australia)
690 – Fiona Wood (Australia)
Surviving a burn in childhood is not the The role of cell based therapies in burn
end of the journey in respect to long
wound healing
term life expectancy
794 – Liza Gamelli (USA)
Targeting burn prevention in Ukraine:
Evaluation of base knowledge in burn
prevention and first aid treatment
251 – Qing-Hong Zhang (China)
Dysregulation of cholinergic pathways
in the brain of burn injured rats and
impaired neurocognition
1545 – 1700
352 – Lara Harvey (Australia)
Clothing-related burns in New South
Wales, Australia: impact of legislation
on a continuing problem
Sunday 12 – Thursday 16 October 2014
143 – Yusuke Yamamoto (Japan)
The Long-Term Estimation of
Cryopreserved Skin Allografts in
Severe Burn Injury Patients
645 – Ahmet Cinar Yasti (Turkey)
Dual effect of classical debridement
knifes versus hydrosurgery: Excision
and bacteria seeding. A clinical
prospective randomized study.
Hilton Sydney Hotel • Sydney, Australia
23
Wednesday 15 October 2014
Room
Level 3 Ballroom
Level 4 Room 1
Session
Name
Integra Industry
Sponsored Symposium
0700 – 0800
Burns and Reconstruction: Integra
Expereince around the World
Dr Wood, Dr Gibran, Dr Rives, Dr
Dantzer, Dr Roa
Level 4 Room 2
Level 4 Room 3
Free Paper Session: Burns
Reconstruction 3
Free Paper Session: Intensive Care 1 Free Paper Session: Burns
Epidemiology 2
Session
Name
Symposium 13:
Reconstruction in Burns
Symposium 14: Genetic Alterations
in Thermal Injury
Chairperson
Rei Ogawa and Ted Tredget
Ronald Tompkins and Naoki Aikawa Michael Muller (Australia)
Ricardo Roa (Chile)
Drs Ted Tredget (Canada)
Burn Reconstruction: A
Canadian Perspective
Ronald Tompkins (USA)
Comparisons of Genomic Changes
after Injury
Rei Ogawa (Japan)
Total Scar Management using
Customized Surgical Procedures
David Herndon (USA)
Genomic Changes in Tissues
after Burns
Nikki Allorto (South Africa)
David Milliss (Australia)
David Read (Australia)
Mahmoud El-Oteify (Egypt)
330 – Yen-Chang Hsiao (Taiwan)
Flow-through anterolateral thigh flap
for reconstruction in electrical burns of
the severely damaged upper extremity
482 – Richard Lee (Australia)
Association between duration of
mechanical ventilation and length of
stay, infection rate and mortality for
major burn patients in ICU
144 – Nareswar Sarma Narei (India)
Epidemiology of Paediatric burns in a
Burn Unit of North-East India
527 – Dong Chul Kim (Korea,
Repulci of)
The coverage of postburn full
thickness soft-tissue defects of lower
leg by EDL muscle flap and Sural
mesoneural fasciocutaneous flap
523 – Andrew Lindford (New
Zealand)
The Helsinki Burn Centre Frostbite
Treatment Protocol: Preliminary results
using thrombolysis
93 – Henning Onarheim (Norway)
Burns admitted to Norwegian hospitals
in 2012 – A nationwide survey
Drs Matt Donelan (USA)
Laser Management of the Burn Scar
319 – Tanja Klotz ( Australia)
The use of moisturisers in scar
management following burn injury:
aqueous cream||or alternatives, what
should we be using?
919 – Alexandra Murray (Australia)
Critical care weakness in resuscitation
burn patients in Western Australia:
A case-control study and rootcause analysis.
289 – Laura Pompermaier (Sweden)
Adding co-morbidity to a mortality
prediction model does not improve the
predictive ability.
Fiona Wood (Australia)
Cell based Therapies in Scar
Prevention and Scar Remodelling
9 – Xueyong Li (China)
Wound-healing improvement by
resurfacing split-thickness skin donor
sites with thin split-thickness grafting
909 – Adelin Muganza
(South Africa)
Is early enteral feeding safe for severe
burn patient?
276 – Basil A. Pruitt, Jr. (USA)
Integrated program of epidemiologic
and demographic surveillance of
burn injury
571 – Lincoln Millan (Brazil)
Treatment of axillary contractures
caused by burns using flaps
324 – Alexandra Murray (Australia)
Immunonutrition in major burns
and glutamine usage throughout
Australasia and the United Kingdom
164 – Evangelos Sarantopoulos
(Germany)
The underestimated risk of a delayed
referral to burn specialists
221 – Peter Moortgat (Belgium)
The science of stretch: clinical
implications of the mechanobiology
of scars
290 – Irma Oen (Netherlands)
Photographic assessment of burn size
and depth: reliability and validity
97 – Babur Shakirov (Uzbekistan)
Deep foot burns: Epidemiology,
management and consequences
117 – Rei Ogawa (Japan)
Three-dimensional Reconstruction of
Scar Contracture-bearing Axilla and
Digital||Webs by Using the Square
Flap Method
207 – Melinda Pacquola (Australia)
Observational study of burns fluid
resuscitation in ICU
28 – Saera Song (Australia)
Effect of diabetes on the burn
injured patient
941 – Joseph Ogrodnik (USA)
Current choices for wound
coverage in Acute Burns in the
United States-Aesthetic||and
functional considerations
47 – Jennifer Paratz (Australia)
B-type natriuretic peptide: A new
marker of sepsis post burn injury?
935 – Ravi Sood (USA)
Genetic risk factors for post-burn
hypertrophic scarring: results of
a||cross-sectional study
908 – Burak Ozkan (Turkey)
Multiple tissue expander utilization in
wide burn scars of upper extremity
759 – Chandini Perera (Sri Lanka)
Major burns outcomes in a hospital
with limited access to intensive
care||services: An opportunity to
analyse the effects of intubation
and mechanical ventilation on
patient outcome.
695 – Hilary Wallace (Australia)
Epidemiology of household burn
admissions: Bir Hospital, Nepal,
2002-2013
359 – Cherng-Kang Perng (Taiwan)
The clinical manifestation,
diagnosis and surgical treatment
of chronic radiation ulcer after
cardiac catheterization
386 – Bruce Potenza (USA)
Prospective review of central venous
catheter colonization and central line
associated blood stream infection in
burn patients
291 – Shahla Yekta (USA)
In-depth qualitative interviews
and a cross-sectional study of
patients||hospitalised with severe burn
injuries at two hospitals in Kenya
314 – Tracey Perrett (New Zealand)
Development of a predictive model for
inpatient therapy time
163 – Frank Sander (Germany)
Summary of experience with NexoBrid
enzymatic debridement of deeply
burned hands
610 – Helma Hofland (Netherlands)
Burn injuries in children < 1 year at
the Burns Unit, Queen Elizabeth Central
Hospital (QECH), Blantyre, Malawi;
20 years of experience shows high
incidence and increased mortality
505 – Umesh Shah (India)
Co2 fractional laser- A new boon in the
management of Burns scars in Asian
(Indian) skin
157 – Yaron Shoham (Israel)
Long term scarring and quality of life
in NexoBrid vs. SOC debrided burn
patients: Results of a controlled trial
0800 – 1000
1000 – 1030
24
Level 4 Room 4
MORNING TEA and EXHIBITION VIEWING
17th Congress of the International Society for Burn Injuries
ISBI 2014 Sydney
Wednesday 15 October 2014 (continued)
Room
Level 3 Ballroom
Session
Name
Plenary two:
Quality and Outcome Measures
in Burns
Panel
Folke Sjoberg and Mehmet Haberal
Level 4 Room 1
Level 4 Room 2
Level 4 Room 3
Level 4 Room 4
Peter Cameron (AUS)
The Science behind Quality of Care
Introduction – the quality of care
definitions (structure/process
and outcome) and its science –
Quality Indicators
Nicole Gibran (USA)
Structure/process (accreditation/
verification – and quality registries)
The ABA perspective
1030 – 1200
Heather Cleland (AUS)
Structure/process (accreditation/
verification – and quality registries)
The ANZBA perspective
Folke Sjoberg (SWE)
Outcome (quality indicators)
Mortality and mortality predictions
Tina Palmieri (USA)
Outcome (quality indicators)
Length of stay
Alette de Jong (NL)
Outcome (quality indicators)
Quality of nursing
Elsevier/BURNS Journal Symposium
“The Journal Publishing Cycle and
BURNS journal”
1200 – 1300
1200 – 1300
LUNCH and EXHIBITION VIEWING. POSTER VIEWING LEVEL 4 FOYER
1300 – 1400
General Assembly and
Awards Ceremony
1400 – 1430
AFTERNOON TEA and EXHIBITION VIEWING
1430 – 1530
ANZBA AGM
1430 – 1700
Free Afternoon
1900 – 2300
Congress Dinner
Sunday 12 – Thursday 16 October 2014
Hilton Sydney Hotel • Sydney, Australia
25
Thursday 16 October 2014
Room
Level 3 Ballroom
Level 4 Room 1
Level 4 Room 2
Level 4 Room 3
Session
Name
Symposium 15:
Sedation, Analgesia, and Delirium
(SAD) in the Peri-operative Period
Symposium 16: Ethical
Considerations/
Resource Management
(debate format with panel input)
Free Paper Session: Burns
Reconstruction 4
Free Paper Session: Intensive Care 2 Free Paper Session:
Burn Management in
Developing Countries
Chairperson
Jeeva Martyn and Keith Judkins
David Greenhalgh and Rajeev Ahuja
Heng-Chan Chen (Taiwan)
Jong Lee (USA)
Richard Taylor (Australia)
James Holmes (USA)
Apichai Angspatt (Thailand)
Stuart Watson (United Kingdom)
J.A. Jeevendra Martyn (USA)
Pharmacology of burn-induced
tolerance to sedatives and narcotics
Richard Nnabuko (Africa)
Problems in burn care delivery and
resource management in Africa
896 – Michael Serghiou (USA)
The use of silicone impregnated
foam material in the management
of burn scar hypertrophy –
Practical applications for effective
rehabilitation interventions
804 – Ronald Alexander
(New Zealand)
Techniques for limb elevation in burn
surgery: an analysis and proposal
793 – Jennifer Bandle (USA)
Burn care in developing countries
establishing sustainable healthcare
Tina L. Palmieri (USA)
Sedation, Analgesia, and Deliriumdifferences between adults
and children
Naiem Moiemen
Burn care resources and challenges
in Europe
147 – Anita Plaza (Australia)
Impact of burn contracture and therapy
time on quality of life after burn
injury: outcomes from the Professor
Stuart Pegg Adult Burn Centre,
Brisbane,Australia
661 – Paul Baker (Australia)
10-year review of maxillary screw
fixation of endotracheal tubes in
burn patients
203 – Fernando Guerrero (Mexico)
5 years experience of a skin bank in a
developing country
Nikki Allorto (South Africa)
SAD state of affairs –the reality in
South Africa
Mario Velez Palafox (Mexico)
Hurdles for obtaining appropriate
resources for Burn Care in Mexico
570 – Paul van Zuiljen (Netherlands)
Perforator flaps versus full thickness
grafts for broad scar contracture
release: a multicenter randomized
controlled trial.
252 – Jonathan Cubitt
(United Kingdom)
Managing Hyperpyrexia with
Continuous Veno-venous
Haemodiafiltration in burns patients
345 – Bethany Lansom (Australia)
From Sydney to Congo: from comfort
to the uncomfortable
Yahya Shehabi (Australia)
Delirium in the ICU
Jonathan Heather (New Zealand)
The role of public monopolies in New
Zealand burn care
279 – Mayer Tenenhaus (USA)
A computer-generated mathematical
model for the preoperative planning of
rotation flaps
889 – Federica D’Asta
67 – Ariel Miranda (Mexico)
(United Kingdom)
Use of Liquid Extracellular matrix in
How education using Crisis Resource
chronic burn wounds
Management (CRM) can reduce human
factor errors in burns emergency care
David Greenhalgh (USA)
The ethical use of limited resources in
the United States
899 – Cagri A Uysal (Turkey)
Perforator pedicled propeller flaps in
burn reconstruction
486 – Linwood Haith (USA)
Vancomyin and linezolid induced
thrombocytopenia in burns
410 – Salathiel Mzezewa
(South Africa)
Clinical outcome of Epileptic burn
patients at Mankweng Burns unit,
Limpopo, South Africa
Rajeev Ahuja
Defining minimum standard of burn
care for LMICs
459 – Luiz Philipe Vana (Brazil)
Delayed star flap for nipple
reconstruction in burned breast
225 – Jenny Held (USA)
Surgeon-performed hemodynamic
transesophageal echocardiography in
the burn ICU
114 – Marie-Claude Pelchat
(Taiwan)
Development of a pressure garment
training program for Central America
Steve E. Wolf
Ethical considerations in
burn management
309 – Quang Vinh Vu (Vietnam)
Dorsal double perforators ‘super-thin’
free flap: A new choosing in neck and
face contrcture scar reconstruction
549 – Maarit Hult (Finland)
Re-feeding syndrome in 13-year-old
boy with 60% TBSA skin loss
890 – Narayan (Ryan) Prasad
(Australia)
Burn injuries in Syria – A field hospital
burn unit
33 – Cheree Walker (Australia)
Neuropathic pain symptoms post
lower limb burns and the effect of
compression garments.
232 – James Jeng (USA)
One burn one standard-update on
the initiative for an international
data||standard for burn care software
including burn diagrams
452 – Narayan (Ryan) Prasad
(Australia)
The Emergency Management of
Severe Burns course – inaugural
programs in Nepal and Indonesia
950 – Nanda Kandamany
(United Kingdom)
100 Free flaps for burn injuries –
Lessons learned and refinements of
design in a 16-year experience.
298 – Rochelle Kurmis (Australia)
407 – Jeremy Rawlins (Australia)
The effectiveness of trace element
A burn centre for Moshi, Tanzania
supplementation following severe burn
injury: a systematic review
507 – Aruna Wijewardena
(Australia)
Biobrane in the management
of the acutely burnt auricle – a
comparative study
736 – Sepehr Lajevardi (Australia)
Prevention of hypothermia in the
transfer of burns patients
715 – Pablo Rodriguez (Mexico)
Burn Treatment with epifast® (live
Cultured Human Keratinocytes):
Our experience||at least five (5)
years: Protocol Treatment with a
Biological Dressing.
850 – Katie Wu (Taiwan)
The path from quadriplegia to
walk with able hands-a case of
comprehensive burn rehabilitation
830 – Athina Lavrentieva (Greece)
End-of-life care in the burn intensive
care unit: attitudes and practices
703 – Lourdes Santiso (Guatemala)
Surgical Challenges of late
consultation cases
0800 – 1000
401 – Christina Yip
(United Kingdom)
The application of objective colour
evaluations on scars and the
surrounding unwounded skin.
1000 – 1030
26
Level 4 Room 4
238 – Mario Velez Palafox (Mexico)
How to adapt to your resources: fourprong intravenous line hanger tripod
for dorsal hand grafts
MORNING TEA and EXHIBITION VIEWING
17th Congress of the International Society for Burn Injuries
ISBI 2014 Sydney
Thursday 16 October 2014 (continued)
Room
Level 3 Ballroom
Level 4 Room 1
Level 4 Room 2
Level 4 Room 3
Level 4 Room 4
Session
Name
Symposium 17:
Laser, Fat Grafting, Minimally
Invasive Techniques
Symposium 18:
Prevention
Free Paper Session: Outcome
Measures 2
Free Paper Session: Intensive Care 3 Free Paper Session: Research 5
Chairperson
John Harvey and Matt Donelan
Michael Peck
Healther Cleland (Australia)
Jui-Yung Yang (Taiwan)
Keith Judkins (UK)
Athina Lavrentieva (Greece)
The use of the Vascular and
Fractional C02 Laser in the
treatment of Hypertrophic burns
scars and contractures
Keith Judkins (United Kingdom)
Reviewing prevention in Europe/UK
562 – Paul Gittings (Australia)
Establishing the reliability and validity
of the Lower Limb Functional Index
(LLFI) in Western Australian lower limb
burns patients
149 – Neophytos Stylianou
55 – Zachary Munn (Australia)
(United Kingdom)
The evolution of an evidence-based
Patient outcomes vs. service workload: resource for burns care
an analysis of lengths of stay in the
burn service of England and Wales
Matthias Donelan (USA)
The Boston experience
Rebecca Ivers (Australia)
Research and policy: burn injury in
Aboriginal children in Australia
667 – Sepehr Lajevardi (Australia)
Impact of first-aid on clinical outcome
of large burns
851 – Kian Tjon Tan
(United Kingdom)
The Emergency Management of
Severe Burns course: A 16 year
experience in the UK
471 – Vetrichevvel Thirthar
Palanivelu (Australia)
Effect of non-severe burn injury on the
dorsal root ganglion and the impact of
inflammatory modulation
Peter Schumaker (USA)
Fractional Ablative C02 treatment of
burns scars contractures
Hilary Wallace (Australia)
Working together to inform burn
prevention in Nepal: Results of
a collaboration between a burns
hospital, local NGO and research unit
692 – Jong Lee (USA)
Readmission following acute
burn hospitalization to paediatric
burn centre
615 – Jussi Valtonen (Finland)
Experience of fixating split-thickness
skin grafts (STSG) on burn wounds
by||Negative Pressure Wound Therapy
(NPWT)
632 – Johan Thorfinn (Sweden)
High-voltage injury may result in
late-onset paraplegia and atrophy of
the spinal cord
John Friedstat (USA)
Continuing improvement in burns
scars with additional treatments
Janine Duke (Australia)
Answers to your burning questions:
using population-based and clinical
data for prevention
620 – Koen Maertens (Belgium)
Does outpatient satisfaction surveys
lead to happier patients?
697 – Nicholas Smith (Australia)
Cumulative fasting times for major
burn injury patients
576 – Samantha Valvis (Australia)
The immune response to burn
and non-burn trauma: What’s
the difference?
Chandini Perera (Sri Lanka)
The Sri Lankan experience--Using
morbidity & mortality data to
effect change
443 – Jill Meirte (Belgium)
Clinimetric properties of a new
pressure algometer to evaluate
pressure pain||threshold in patients
with burn scars
733 – Elizabeth Wharton
(United Kingdom)
Supra-early excision of burn wounds:
an evolving practice
179 – Yiwei Wang (Australia)
Characterization of elastin-Integra on
wound contraction and angiogenesis
Sydney Ch’ng (Australia)
Fat grafting in the management of
burns scars- Theoretical back ground
and future potential
693 – Namal Munasinghe (Australia)
Victorian adult burns service:
our experience with the Modified
Meek technique
122 – Hyeong Tae Yang (Korea)
Assessment of biochemical markers
in early post-burn period for prediction
of||acute kidney injury and mortality
in patients with major burn injury:
Comparison||of serum creatinine,
serum cystatin-c, serum and urine
neutrophil||gelatinase-associated
lipocalin (NGAL)
914 – Christopher Wearn
(United Kingdom)
Proton-NMR metabolomics as
an approach to study metabolic
responses to thermal injury
Philippa Mccaffrey (Australia)
The place of Micro-needling the long
term remodelling of burns scars
266 – Daizhi Peng (China)
Plasma circulating DNA levels in burn
patients and its clinical significance
21 – Jui-Yung Yang (Taiwan)
The Role of PiCCO System in Elder and
Extensive Burns
904 – Yee Wong (USA)
Ubiquitin urine levels in burn patients
The Vancouver Scar scale is not
enough. Objectivity is the new
paradigm in burns scar assessment
772 – Megan Simons (Australia)
Test-retest reliability of the
POSAS, Colorimeter, 3D camera,
and ultrasound.
629 – Mete Dolapci (Turkey)
The effects of albumin or fresh frozen
plasma resuscitation in major burn
victims on mortality
185 – Yong-Ming Yao (China)
The effect of HMGB1 on functional
differentiation of regulatory dendritic
cell and its receptor mechanism
after burns
Robert Mclaughlin (Australia)
Optical Coherence Tomography in the
assessment of burns scars vascularity
468 – Yvonne Singer (Australia)
The ANZBA Burn Quality Improvement
Program (BQIP): Improving burn care
across two nations.
Chris Adams (New Zealand)
Dong Chul Kim (Korea)
1030 – 1120
Continuing improvement in burns
scars with additional treatments
1120 – 1145
1145 – 1200
8 – Kian Tjon Tan (Unites Kingdom)
The Mersey Burns App: A validation
and usability study
Rommel Cruzado (Australia)
Ultrasound jn the assessment of
burns scars for Fractional C02 laser
treatment linking MJoule to mm
1200 – 1300
New Executive Committee Meeting
(lunch meeting)
1200 – 1330
LUNCH and EXHIBITION VIEWING. POSTER VIEWING LEVEL 4 FOYER
1330
CLOSE
Sunday 12 – Thursday 16 October 2014
Hilton Sydney Hotel • Sydney, Australia
27