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<strong>ISBI</strong> <strong>2014</strong> Detailed ProgramSunday 12 October <strong>2014</strong>Room Level 1 Room 2 Level 1 Room 8 Level 2 Room 3 Level 2 Room 20700 – 0730<strong>ISBI</strong> Nursing Committee0730 – 0800<strong>ISBI</strong> Rehabilitation Committee0800 – 08300830 – 0900Data Repository Committee Meeting0900 – 09300930 – 10001000 – 10301030 – 1100<strong>ISBI</strong> Research Committee Meeting<strong>ISBI</strong> <strong>2014</strong> Pre-Congress WorkshopCaring for the Burn-Injured Patient – Beyond48 Hours<strong>ISBI</strong> Prevention Committee Meeting1100 – 1130<strong>ISBI</strong> Disaster Planning Committee MeetingDidactic Sessions1130 – 12001200 – 12301230 – 1315 LUNCH BREAK1315 – 1510 <strong>ISBI</strong> <strong>2014</strong> Pre-Congress WorkshopCaring for the Burn-Injured Patient – Beyond48 HoursDidactic Sessions1510 – 1730 <strong>ISBI</strong> <strong>2014</strong> Pre-Congress WorkshopCaring for the Burn-Injured Patient – Beyond48 HoursHands-on break out Sessions1730 – 1745 Workshop concludes


Monday 13 October <strong>2014</strong>Room Level 3 Ballroom Level 4 Room 1 Level 4 Room 2 Level 4 Room 3 Level 4 Room 40800 – 0830 Opening Ceremony0830 – 0900 Tanner-Boswick-Vandeput PrizePresentation and LectureSessionNameModerators0900 – 1000PRESIDENTIAL PLENARY: <strong>ISBI</strong>’sCommitment to Global Burn CareRichard L. Gamelli (USA) and DavidMackie (Netherlands)David Meddings (Switzerland)Global burns: challengesand opportunitiesRajeev Ahuja (India)<strong>ISBI</strong> Partnership with Global AllianceFor Clean CookstovesMichael Serghiou (USA)Caring for the Burn-InjuredPatient – Beyond 48 Hours: FromConcept to DeliveryGretchen Carrougher (USA)Caring for the Burn-Injured Patient– Beyond 48 Hours: Evaluation andFuture Plans1000 – 1030 MORNING TEA and EXHIBITION VIEWINGSessionNameSymposium 1:New Technologies in Burn CareSymposium 2:Preparedness for burn masscasualty disasterChairperson Naiem Moiemen and Jyrki Vuola Lior Rosenberg Folke Sjoberg (Sweden)David Mackie (Netherlands)David Meddings (Switzerland)1030 – 1200Professor Steve WolfNew innovations: an overviewProfessor Paul van Zuiljen(Netherlands)Scar assessment: what is reliable?Professor Edward Tredget(Cananda)Future of scar managementProfessor Jun Wu (China)Novel wound assessmentDr Kenneth Burhop (USA)Use of stem cells with skin substitutesProfessor Steve WolfCollagen Matrix: Structure andFunction – Translating to NewOpportunitiesDr Palmer Bessey (USA)Our 9/11 experience and assessingnational facilitiesDr James Jeng (USA)The formation of a functional netDr Imrul Warsi (Bangladesh)Burn mass casualty: lesson learnedfrom the worst blaze in the historyof BangladeshDr Lior Rosenberg (Israel)Preparing for burn mass casualties1200 – 1230 Molnlycke IndustryEditorial Committee Meeting forSponsored Symposium“Burns” Journal1230 – 13001300 – 13301200 – 1330 LUNCH and EXHIBITION VIEWING. POSTER VIEWING LEVEL 4 FOYERSessionNameChairperson1330 – 1500Symposium 3:Psycho-social support forburns patientsGretchen Carrougher andDavid MackieGretchen Carrougher RN, MNIntroductions/WelcomeNicole S. Gibran, MD, FACSUse of burn-specific or generalpsychosocial measures in research:What should be used?Symposium 4: Research in Burns – AnInternational Perspective on Researchand Development in Burn CareLee CancioHajime Matsumura, MD, DMSc, FACS(Japan)Present and future research in woundhealing and skin replacementsShari Honari, RN, BSN (USA)The role of the Research Coordinatorin burnsYoung Investigators Prize Papers Free Paper Session: Research 1 Free Paper Session: Nursing &Burns Reconstruction 1866 – Shizhao Ji (China)Transplantation of cryopreservedmicronized amniotic membraneenhance diabetic wounds healing byregulate local microenvironment218 – Chuan-An Shen (China)Clinical study of repairing donor siteof thickness from cicatricial skin withauto-scalp grafting90 – Jiajun Tang (China)Effect of endothelial microparticlesgenerated by burn or LPS treatment onendothelial dysfunction383 – Mercy Negble (Ghana)Rehabilitation of burn patientsadmitted at Komfo AnokyeTeaching Hospital573 – Pablo Pase (Brazil)Amniotic membrane dressing in adeveloping country burn unit834 – Amit Mukund Mulay (India)Quality of life assessment for burnsurvivors in India214 – Zjir Rashaan (Netherlands)Non-silver treatment versus topicalsilver agents in treatment of partialthickness burn wounds in children: asystematic review and meta-analysisDavid Ahrenholz (USA)Mosutafa Elmasry (Sweden)153 – Pius Agbenorku (Ghana)Electrical burns: the trend and riskfactors in the Ghanaian population684 – Mansour Alghamdi (Australia)Epigenetic modification in keloid scars492 – Cassandra Chong (Australia)Development of a triple polymerscaffold for skin tissue engineering356 – Alvin Chua (Singapore)Evaluation of a xeno-free culturesystem to expand keratinocytesfor potential||therapeutic use insevere burns657 – Leila Cuttle (Australia)Ensuring patients receiveadequate burn first aid treatmentthrough the||public-paramedichospitalpathway949 – Robert Dinsdale(United Kingdom)Novel blood counter parameters inburn injury441 – Daria Dolotova (Russia)Decision support system in thedelivery of care to children withburn injury408 – Mohamed Eldardiri(United Kingdom)The use of Integra® and Matriderm®in combination with autologouscultured keratinocytes and fibroblastson microcarriers reduce woundcontraction in pig wound model852 – Tze Wing Wong (Hong Kong)Development and testing feasibility ofan educational DVD for the burn injurypatients and caregiversChris Parker (Australia)Gretchen Carrougher (USA)515 – Deborah Bates (Australia)Is there is a need for anintegrated national burn survivorsupport strategy?764 – Clare Batkin (Australia)Hypertrophic scarring of skin graftdonor sites in burns patients:Prevalence,||risk factors and currentscar management practices.743 – Matthias Aust (Germany)Combination of Needling and ReCellfor repigmentation of burn scars – pilotstudy results595 – Mehmet Bozkurt (Turkey)Current approaches and therapies inburn scar modulation396 – Shu Ying Chang (Taiwan)Reconstruction for long length, thirddegree burn of single digit withextended reverse dorsal metacarpalartery flaps315 – Anita Boekelaar (Netherlands)Evaluation of aftercare and problemsexperienced in first year after burns839 – Rachel Kornhaber (Australia)Qualitative research methodologies:Rigorous, robust and systematic inthe||exploration of burns trauma278 – Cora Roerhorst (Netherlands)Family centered careFree Paper Session: Paediatrics 1 Free Paper Session: Research 2 Free Paper Session: Burn woundManagement 1Tony Sparnon (Australia)Lourdes Santiso (Guatemala)500 – Kathy Bicknell (Australia)Changes in paediatric burn care: Alongitudinal review of a paediatricburns unit373 – Jacqueline Burgess(Australia)Hot beverage scalds: a simmeringpaediatric public health issuePeter Haertsch (Australia)Junichi Sasaki (Japan)607 – Matt Fell (United Kingdom)The reliability of objective burnscar assessment in a compact andaffordable tool measuring colorimetryand trans-epidermal water loss493 – Emma Gee Kee (Australia)A randomised controlled trial of threedifferent burns dressings for partialthickness burns in childrenLisa Huisban (Indonesia)Andrew Catley (Australia)806 – Moti Harats (Israel)Characteristics of improvised explosivedevice trauma casualties in the Gazastrip: the Israeli experience94 – Jonathan Hew (Australia)The role of high protein diet inskin formation2017th Congress of the International Society for Burn Injuries<strong>ISBI</strong> <strong>2014</strong> Sydney


Monday 13 October <strong>2014</strong>Room Level 3 Ballroom Level 4 Room 1 Level 4 Room 2 Level 4 Room 3 Level 4 Room 41330 – 1500Rajeev B. Ahuja, MDReviewing quality of life outcomes inburn patients in low-income countriesDr Ivette L. Icaza R.Use of a pre-operative teachingmanual for parents and older childrenin a pediatric burn center: Earlyevaluation findingsDavid Mackie, MDAudience Q&A1500 – 1530 AFTERNOON TEA and EXHIBITION VIEWINGSessionNameSymposium 5: Infection Control andWound ManagementA/Professor John E. Greenwood(Australia)Development of a dermal matrixproduct for use in burn patientsNaiem Moiemen, MB BCh, MSc, FRCS,FRCSPS (UK)Research in burns in the UK:challenges and opportunitiesLeopoldo C. Cancio, MD, FACS (USA)Randomized controlled trials in burnpatients: do not resuscitate?Symposium 6: Tissue Engineering/Skin Substitutes821 – Ramnandan PrasadChaudhary (Nepal)Pediatric burns in Nepal: Factsand challenges136 – Mehmet Demircan (Turkey)Reconstruction of severe burn injuriesof the face in children by using thecollagen-elastin matrix716 – Paul Di Giovine (Australia)Seven year experience with Integra ina paediatric population: 68 cases960 – Christina Duncan (USA)Relation of burn-specific socialdifficulties to burn severity &traumatic||stress in pediatricburn survivors403 – Dan Enescu (Romania)Electrocutions in children269 – Olga Filippova (Russia)Interrelation of clinical, morphologicaland immunohistochemical patternsin pathological post-burn scars.Classification and algorithm ofconservative treatment of scarsin children228 – Dr Ayse Ebru Abali (Turkey)Features of Contact-Burn Injuries inInfants and Older Children: Clues forPreventive StrategiesChairperson Peter Dziewulski and James Jeng Paul van Zuijlen and Fiona Wood Kelly Waddell (Australia)Yvonne Wilson (UK)1530 – 1700Dr BradburyInfection Control in Burns and Designof Burns UnitsRichard Nnabuko (Africa)Infection Control in a CostContained EnvironmentJohn Greenwood (Australia)Where Does Burn Infection ComeFrom?Richard Wong She (New Zealand)The Role of Technology in Burn Sepsis( Prevention / Diagnosis / Treatment)Stuart Watson (UK)Surgical Management of BurnWound Sepsis(continued)1700 – 1800 BREAK1800 – 2000 Welcome Reception – Level 3 FoyerNicole Gibran (USA)Extensive single centre experiencewith IntegraZhe Li (Australia)Tissue engineering of skin – Researchand developmentNaiem Moiemen (UK)Skin substitutes – how does it work?Fiona Wood (Australia)The use of cell based therapiesPaul van Zuijlen (Netherlands)Tissue engineering: theother dimensions556 – Vlad Illie (Australia)One stage Integra in an animal skingraft contraction model302 – Denise Jacquemin (Belgium)Acids and bases inducedcutaneous injuries: from evaluationto decontamination104 – Dr Ayse Ebru Abali (Turkey)Prediction of pressure ulcer risk inburn patients during their prolongedhospital stay by using Braden Scale945 – Peter Hampson(United Kingdom)Reduced neutrophil function inresponse to burn injury is associatedwith mortality747 – Varun Harish (Australia)Accuracy of burn size estimation inpatients transferred to adult BurnUnits in Sydney, Australia: an audit of698 patients771 – Yue-Sheng Huang (China)Bradykinin B1 Receptor InducesIncrease of Organic VascularPermeability Following Severe Burn969 – Jun Wu (China)Effective Symptomatic Treatmentfor Severe and Intractable PruritusAssociated with Severe Burn-inducedHypertrophic Scars – A Prospective,Multicenter, Controlled Trial in74 Patients261 – Roger Huckfeldt (USA)Prevention of Strike-throughContamination of PatientContact Surfaces765 – Andrea C. Issler (Australia)MRSA acquisition, transmission, andimpact on the outcome of severelyburnt patients at Concord Hospital877 – Rae Johnson (Australia)Microbial modulation comparingtwo solutions with ultrasonicassisted debridement: a longitudinalrandomised control trial on burnwounds, grafts and chronic wounds829 – Fenella Halstead(United Kingdom)The antibacterial activity of aceticacid against biofilming organisms ofrelevance to burns patients.29 – Xu Sheng Liu (China)Study on the mechanism and itsaccelerating role on burn woundhealing of murine BM-MSCs with upregulatedmicroRNA134 expression849 – Gaoxing Luo (China)Nitric oxide stimulates epidermal stemcells migration via cGMP-mediatedsignal transduction652 – Hiromi Miyazaki (Japan)Application of a biodegradablenanosheet as a new dressing forburn woundsFree Paper Session: Paediatrics 2 Free Paper Session: Research 3 Free Paper Session: Burn woundManagement 2268 – Ela Hyland (Australia)Prospective randomised controlled trialcomparing VersajetTM hydrosurgeryand conventional debridement inpaediatric burns293 – Madeleine Jacques (Australia)Haematomas under lower limb skingrafts – is it a bloody issue?654 – Jessica Maskell (Australia)Young people living with burn injuryand scarring: perceptions of self, socialinteractions and experiences withsignificant others757 – Seema Menon (Australia)Optimal time to skin grafting inpaediatric burns: a systematic review766 – Carol Oliveira (Canada)Toxic Shock Syndrome in PediatricBurns Registry (TSSPB Registry):challenges and accomplishmentsof setting up an internationaldisease registry906 – Julia Sarginson(United Kingdom)The MISTIC Study – a prospectiveobservational study of the systemicresponse to injury and outcomes ofsmall burns in pre-school children:The first 150 children.742 – Helene Scheer (Switzerland)Toxic shock syndrome in pediatricburns – is the devil in the details?38 – Smitha Segu (India)Pediatric suicidal burns: agrowing concern155 – Yaron Shoham (Israel)Summary of pediatric clinical trialexperience with NexoBridMichael Rudd (Australia)Peter Lars Kamolz (Austria)105 – John Edward Greenwood(Australia)The process of developing andoptimising a synthetic dermal scaffold– the Biodegradable TemporisingMatrix (BTM)194 – Lars-Peter Kamolz (Austria)The use of telemedicine in burncare: Development of a mobilesystem for TBSA documentation andremote assessment.739 – Edgar Krötzsch (Mexico)Clinical and histomorphologicalassessment of wound repair inmid-partial thickness burn woundstreated with allogeneic keratinocyte vs.silicone-collagen dressings200 – Becky Leung (Australia)Are burns survivors at increased riskof cardiovascular disease?780 – Yeyang Li (China)The role of integrin-linked kinase inangiogenesis of hypertrophic scar416 – Li Ma (China)Effect and mechanism of dantroleneon the skeletal muscle of rats withsevere scald injury777 – Mirriam Maimbo (Zambia)Early delayed skin grafting of burnwounds at university teaching hospital,Lusaka, Zambia724 – Loyola McLean (Australia)Type D, ‘distressed’ personalityis associated with elevatedpsychological||symptom levels in earlyadjustment to burn injury in adults74 – Abelardo Medina (Canada)New therapeutic approachesfor heterotopic ossification inburn patientsDi Elfleet (Australia)Linwood Haith (USA)795 – Markus Öhlbauer (Germany)Enzymatic Debridement and NegativePresssure Wound Therapy (NPWT)Combined use in burned patient532 – Jan Dokter (Netherlands)Bacteriological cultures on admission;to do or not to do, that’s the question325 – Brian Burgess (USA)To Brush or not to Brush: That is thequestion. Oral Care in Intensive Careand Burn Centers is Critical.23 – Dustin Crumby (USA)Carbapenem-resistantEnterobacteriaceae (CRE) in aburn center288 – Sharon CuperusAn outbreak of multi-resistantPseudomonas aeruginosa in a burncentre; tackling the problem438 – Jonathan Dunne(United Kingdom)ReCell in Early Burns Surgery: ASystematic Review of the Literature205 – Mohammed Farid(United Kingdom)Does burn wound infection alwayslead to hypertrophic scarring?72 – Eubenice Paz Gumasing(Philippines)A Comparison of Semi-Open Dressingswith Moist Exposed Burn Ointment(MEBO) versus Standard GauzeDressings with Silver Sulfadiazinein the Treatment of Filipino Patientswith Acute Superficial PartialThickness Burns496 – Kellie Stockton (Australia)Outpatient paediatric burn injury – amissing part of the puzzleSunday 12 – Thursday 16 October <strong>2014</strong> Hilton Sydney Hotel • Sydney, Australia 21


Tuesday 14 October <strong>2014</strong>Room Level 3 Ballroom Level 4 Room 1 Level 4 Room 2 Level 4 Room 3 Level 4 Room 4SessionNameSymposium 7:Bone metabolism in Severe BurnsSymposium 8: Tissue engineeringand cultured skinChairperson Gordon Klein and David Herndon Hajime Matsumara and Young-Chul Jang0800 – 1000Gordon Klein MD (USA)IntroductionDavid Herndon MD (USA)Muscle and Bone Research in BurnsGordon L Klein MD (USA)How Burn Victims Lose BoneJohn Eisman MD (Australia)Consequences of Post-’Burn BoneLoss, Assessing Fracture RiskPeter Ebeling MD (Australia)Perventing and Treating Post-BurnBone LossSteven Wolf MD (USA)Managing bone loss in a burnunit setting1000 – 1030 MORNING TEA and EXHIBITION VIEWINGSessionNameSymposium 9:Pediatric Burn CareYoung-Chul Jang (Korea)The Clinical Experience of BurnManagement Using Cell Therapy inKorea: Past and PresentSaewha Jeon (Korea)Cultured Cells forCutaneous RegenerationHajime Matsumara (Japan)Japanese Experience of Using CEA inMajor Burns:Results and Changes in 6 YearsYosuke Ozawa (Japan)JACE 6-Year ResultsJohn Greenwood (Australia)Composite Cultured Skin in a threedimensional scaffoldSymposium 10:NursingFree Paper Session: BurnsReconstruction 2Salathiel Mzezewa (South Africa)201 – Junjie Chen (China)Effect of angiotensin convertingenzyme inhibitor on collagenmetabolism in keloid fibroblast cells446 – Shiow Shuh Chuang (Taiwan)Effective deep fascia releasing in postburn axillar scar contracture245 – Marie Comhaire Valange(France)Comparative study using manualmassages or mechanical massageswith Ergolift on face and neck burns423 – Lieve De Cuyper (Belgium)‘Scar Freeze’ : A feasibility study forthe effects of cryosauna on burn scars.277 – Moustafa Elmasry (Sweden)Hand function deficits after burn – aremaining problem in Egypt447 – Mahmoud El-Oteify (Egypt)Diagnosis of post burn syndactyle470 – Marà a Dora Espinosa (Chile)Use of split-thickness skin graftsin postburn contracture release inextremities, at outpatient pediatricsurgery center in Santiago of Chile.536 – RuthAnn Fanstone(United Kingdom)The Impact of an InternationalEducational Program on TransformingPractice and Outcomes inScar Management140 – Xiang Sheng Feng (China)Clinical observation of acellularxenogeneic (porcine) dermal matrixtherapy on||improvement of immunefunction in severe burn patients860 – Philip Fidler (USA)Burn Survivors with disabilities returnto Leisure, a study of Adaptive Sport395 – Thilanee Gankande (Australia)Reliability and validity of scarassessments performed with anintegrated skin testing device – theDermaLab Combo518 – Karl-Anton Harms (Australia)Fractional carbon dioxide lasertreatment for burn-relatedscarring: an evidence||up-date andhypothetical mechanismFree Paper Session: Burns registriesand Outcome Measures 1Chairperson Yvette Icaza and Ariel Miranda Alette DeJong and Christine Parker Yvonne Singer (Australia)Patrick Kealy (USA)1030 – 1200Ramnandan Prasad Chaudhary(Nepal)Facts and challenges for provingstandard paediatric burn care in lowand middle income countriesTina Palmieri (Sacramento, E.U.A.)Nutrition Standards in paediatric burncare: How to get them?Mauricio Pereima (Brasil)Acute paediatric burns surgery: Whatto do?David Herndon (Galveston, E.U.A.)Myths and controversies in paediatricburn careZachary Munn (Australia)Journal Clubs in Burns: How they cancontribute to evidence-based practiceSusan Taggart (Australia)The trauma bubble: patient and familyexperience of serious burn injuryHelma Hofland (Netherlands)Determinants of burn painduring hospitalizationRachel Kornhaber (Australia)Adult burn survivors’ perceptions ofpain: an integrative review368 – Heather Cleland (Australia)The Bi-National Burn Registry:Improving surgical managementof major burns in Australia andNew Zealand578 – Dale Edgar (Australia)Does transfer time to a specialist burnservice influence post-burn mortalityin Australia and New Zealand?187 – Steven Kahn (USA)‘It happened in seconds’ firefighterburn prevention program: evaluation ofa||’train the trainer’ course683 – Nicole Leahy (USA)Use of an existing web based platformto support international remoteclinical mentorshipFree Paper Session: Burns AlliedHealthAnne Darton (Australia)Michael Serghiou (USA)457 – Donna Bennett (New Zealand)Innovative strategies for posturalmanagement in children withburn injuries426 – Eric Dantzer (France)Epidermal and collagen_elastin dermalequivalent in a one single step for 41acute and post burn hands surgery.658 – Martha Druery (Australia)A two year review of burnshospitalisations in Queensland: Asocial determinants perspective731 – Tiffany Grisbrook (Australia)The effect of nanocrystallinesilver dressings on BioimpedanceSpectroscopy measurementswhen monitoring fluid status inburns patients547 – Belinda Kipping (Australia)Preparation and play technologyto relieve anxiety in childrenundergoing||anaesthesia: A prospectiverandomised controlled trial708 – Cecilia Wai Ping Li-Tsang(Hong Kong)Clinical effectiveness of the smartpressure-monitored suit (SPMS)in management of post burnhypertrophic scars473 – Virginia Nunez (Mexico)Experiences in 105 courses ofAdvanced Burn Life Support (ABLS)provider in Mexico625 – Raimo Palmu (Finland)Social and occupational functioning,disability and social adaptation amongsurvivors 6 months after burn injury918 – Chandini Perera (Sri Lanka)Effectiveness of early stretchingexercises for the quality of functionalrecovery of the upper limb in burntpatients admitted to the burns unit ofthe National Hospital of Sri Lanka355 – Anna Rumbach (Australia)Speech-language pathology careof the burn-injured patient: Aninternational perspective366 – Kristina Stiles(United Kingdom)Burn care advisors: educationalliaisons for emergency trauma teamsFree Paper Session: Research 4Emin Turk (Turkey)Joe Bessey (USA)873 – Yexiang Sun (China)Effect of 200 mEq/L hypertonic salineresuscitation on intestinal injury inseverely burned rats275 – Kuzhali Muthumalaiappan(USA)Burn injury impedes erythropoiesisby limiting both erythrocyteprogenitors and erythroblast-islandforming macrophages in the bonemarrow niche922 – Eileen O’Halloran (USA)Hepatic histone deacetylase 1expression and activity followingethanol exposure and burn injury415 – Mauricio Pereima (Brazil)Dermal Substitutes Support the Growthof Human Skin-Derived MesenchymalStromal Cells: Potential Tool forSkin RegenerationFree Paper Session: BurnsEpidemiology 1Chris Adams (New Zealand)Tariq Iqbal (Pakistan)649 – Opoku Ware Ampomah (Ghana)Liquefied petroleum gas related burninjuries. Experience from a burn unit inan emerging oil and gas economy617 – Cem Aydogan (Turkey)Scald burns of the adults related tohot water bags: An unusual cause ofscald burns753 – Hsu Phie Chong (Australia)The state of the union address:Inpatient burns service at the RoyalAdelaide Hospital from 2009 to 201365 – Ela Hyland (Australia)General practitioner survey: giving thepeople what they want351 – Janine Duke (Australia)Burn injury, gender and cancer risk: apopulation-based study939 – Amy Fitzgerald (Australia)Burns in the Elderly: an up-dateon trends in Western Australia andoptimising future management528 – Aparna Dasunmalee Ganhewa(Australia)Itch After Burn Injury: A DescriptiveStudy of WA Burn Patients145 – David Greenhalgh (USA)Hash oil burns: the new drugrelatedepidemic940 – Nicholas Linklater (Australia)A review of burns presentations toPeninsula Health 2009-12370 – Lucy Lu (New Zealand)Attributes of self-inflicted burns in theNew Zealand National Burn Centre968 – Marang Makepe (Australia)A review of burns presentations toPeninsula Health 2009-12678 – Holger Moeller (Australia)Inequalities in burn injuries betweenAboriginal and non-Aboriginal childrenin||New South Wales, AustraliaFree Paper Session: Burn woundManagement 3 and Paediatrics 3Tracie Petrie (Australia)Rajiv Sood (USA)191- Lars-Peter Kamolz (Austria)The use of Suprathel® in deep dermalburns: 1-year follow-up results of aprospective clinical trial706 – Cheri Templeton (Australia)Small burn – Big challenge705 – Kelly Waddell (Australia)Does Gabapentin reduce itch inchildren with acute severe burns?- Aprospective||randomised doubleblindedcontrolled study476 – Stephanie Wicks (Australia)End of range splinting to preventcontracture in paediatric axillaburns – a 10 year review of practiceand outcomes2217th Congress of the International Society for Burn Injuries<strong>ISBI</strong> <strong>2014</strong> Sydney


Tuesday 14 October <strong>2014</strong>Room Level 3 Ballroom Level 4 Room 1 Level 4 Room 2 Level 4 Room 3 Level 4 Room 41030 – 1200Gerard Beerthuizen (Netherlands)Trying to make the right decisionbetween clinical and laboratoryfindings in paediatric burn careAriel Miranda (Mexico)Improving paediatric burn care indeveloping countriesDr Dare Turene (Chile)Child abuse and burnsGretchen Carrougher (USA)Pain assessment: What’sthe difference!1200 – 1300 Smith & Nephew IndustrySponsored Symposium1200 – 1330 LUNCH and EXHIBITION VIEWING. POSTER VIEWING LEVEL 4 FOYERSessionNamePanel1330 – 1530Plenary one:Inhalation Injury: Is it the Problem?Basil A. PruitDiagnosis of Inhalation InjuryDavid N. HerndonAnimal Models of Inhalation InjuryDavid P. MackieVentilatory Support for Patients withInhalation InjuryJohn FraserExtracorporeal Support for InhalationInjury: ECMO and BeyondOsamu TasakiPharmacologic Therapy forInhalation InjuryWilliam G. Cioffi, MDComplications, Long-term Sequella,and Outcomes of Inhalation Injury1530 – 1545 AFTERNOON TEA and EXHIBITION VIEWINGSessionNameSymposium 11: International BurnsData BaseSymposium 12: RehabilitationFocus: Improving minor tomoderate burn injury outcomes inany environment517 – Sadhishaan Sreedharan(Australia)Accelerant related burn injuries inAustralia and New Zealand: An analysisof the Bi-National Burns Registry58 – Tina Palmieri (USA)Predicting resource utilization inburn treatment521 – Helen DeJong (Australia)Validating the patients perception of theirburn injury735 – Vidya Finlay (Australia)Increased time to healing is associatedwith worse scar quality as measuredby the Vancouver Scar Scale217 – Selina Khan (United Kingdom)Are we seeing a new wave ofMethamphetamine-related burns inWestern Australia?Free Paper Session: DisasterManagement & PreventionChairperson Richard Gamelli and Michael Peck Dale Edgar Siobhan Connolly (Australia)Kuldeep Singh (India)1545 – 1700(continued)Peter Cameron (Australia)Introduction to burn registries – Whycollect data?Michael Peck (USA)Development of a minimum data setfor burnsRon Price (USA)Production and distribution of aweb-based data collection system withreporting functionsDavid Meddings (Switzerland)Laying the groundwork for burnprevention in LMIC--Pilot testing ofdata collection form emphasizingcause of injuryKen Dunn (UK)Challenges to burn registries inthe future – Experiences with theInternational Burn Injury DatabaseDr Mimmie Willebrand (SWE)Return to work and leisure: Restoringpatient’s purpose and livelihood rapidlyafter burn injuryDr Dale Edgar (AUS)The scar never sleeps: Influencingpatient’s activity and outcomes whentherapists are NOT thereDr Ivette Icaza (USA)Empowering therapists around theworld: <strong>ISBI</strong> Resources to train staff inany environmentJon Niszczak (USA)The support network for burntherapists across the world is BORNPanel discussion:Moderator: Dale Edgar andIngrid ParryPanelist: Michael Serghiou,Roux Martinez and Fiona WoodChanging the Paradigm of PaediatricBurn Rehabilitation in DevelopingBurn Services838 – Xu-Lin Chen (China)Pediatric deep burns caused by hotincense ashes during <strong>2014</strong> SpringFestival in Fuyang city, China666 – Jonathan Friedstat (USA)Treatment of burn victims followinga nuclear weapon detonation: Asystematic review of the literature511 – James Hodgkinson (Australia)When is enough enough? CumulativeTBSA as a predictive tool in majorburns disaster planning.161 – Lior Rosenberg (Israel)The role of an effective, fast andspecific enzymatic debriding agent(NexoBrid) in the care of mass burns ina disaster scenario545 – Mehdi Ayaz (Iran)The effect of education on theprevention of electrical injuries513 – Bethany Farley (Australia)Primary burns prevention and first aideducation does it work?794 – Liza Gamelli (USA)Targeting burn prevention in Ukraine:Evaluation of base knowledge in burnprevention and first aid treatment352 – Lara Harvey (Australia)Clothing-related burns in New SouthWales, Australia: impact of legislationon a continuing problem789 – Thea Price (USA)Mutant Abcc6-/- mouse as a modelfor heterotopic ossification followingthermal injury362 – Nevra Seyhan (Turkey)Saving the zone of stasis in burnswith melatonin: An experimental studyin rats159 – Yaron Shoham (Israel)Admission cell free DNA asa prognostic factor in burns:quantification by use of anovel technique262 – Adam Singer (USA)Long wave infrared imaging hasthe potential to reduce unnecessarysurgery and||delays to necessarysurgery in burn patients704 – Andrew Stevenson (Australia)Epigenetic changes after burn injury: aprofile of human scar fibroblastsFree Paper Session: PsychologyRebecca Schrale (Australia)Marie Claude Pelchat (Taiwan)787 – Radha Holavanahalli (USA)Perceived social support and qualityof life among survivors of majorburn injury124 – Pelchat Marie-Claude (Taiwan)The life rehabilitation experience of burnsurvivors following a suicide attempt295 – Lisa Martin (Australia)Posttraumatic growth after burn injuryin an Australian population558 – Sarah McGarry (Australia)The relationship between mentalhealth and itch in burns patients942 – Birgit Pfitzer (Australia)Towards a new normality:Recovery from burn injuries after amajor bushfire286 – Anthony Sparnon (Australia)Surviving a burn in childhood is not theend of the journey in respect to longterm life expectancy251 – Qing-Hong Zhang (China)Dysregulation of cholinergic pathwaysin the brain of burn injured rats andimpaired neurocognition886 – Christian Ottomann (Germany)New evidenced based protocols in theconservative therapy of superficialpartial thickness (IIa°) and deeppartial thickness (IIb°) burns823 – Chris Parker (Australia)An evaluation of the effect of HydrogenPeroxide Vapour decontaminationon patient healthcare acquiredinfection rates and the reductionof environmental contaminationwith multi resistant organisms in aspecialised Burns Unit31 – Sushma Sagar (India)Morel lavelle lesions revisited : anexperience from tertiary care traumacenter ,new delhi india148 – Smitha Segu (India)Randomized, double-blind, multicentricstudy to compare the efficacyand safety||of Xylentra with SilverSulfadiazine in patients with partialthickness burnsFree Paper Session: Burn woundManagement 4Luis Phillipe Vana (Brazil)David Vogit (USA)344 – David Voigt (USA)xenograft is as effective as a humanfibroblast-derived temporary skinsubstitute in the treatment of partialthickness burns, and more economical590 – Jyrki Vuola (Finland)Autologous keratinocyte spray to treatsevere burns204 – Britta Wallner (Germany)Extensive use of Negative PressureWound Therapy (NPWT) in severeburned patients783 – Oren Weissman (Israel)Treatment of severe 2nd and 3rddegree burns with Enzyme Alginogel(Flaminal®) -Is there a ‘Jack of allTrades’ for topical agents?785 – Oren Weissman (Israel)Negatively charged polystyrenemicrospheres for the treatment ofburns and problematic wounds ofdifferent etiologies690 – Fiona Wood (Australia)The role of cell based therapies in burnwound healing143 – Yusuke Yamamoto (Japan)The Long-Term Estimation ofCryopreserved Skin Allografts inSevere Burn Injury Patients645 – Ahmet Cinar Yasti (Turkey)Dual effect of classical debridementknifes versus hydrosurgery: Excisionand bacteria seeding. A clinicalprospective randomized study.Sunday 12 – Thursday 16 October <strong>2014</strong> Hilton Sydney Hotel • Sydney, Australia 23


Wednesday 15 October <strong>2014</strong>Room Level 3 Ballroom Level 4 Room 1 Level 4 Room 2 Level 4 Room 3 Level 4 Room 4SessionNameIntegra IndustrySponsored Symposium0700 – 0800Burns and Reconstruction: IntegraExpereince around the WorldDr Wood, Dr Gibran, Dr Rives, DrDantzer, Dr RoaSessionNameSymposium 13:Reconstruction in BurnsSymposium 14: Genetic Alterationsin Thermal InjuryFree Paper Session: BurnsReconstruction 3Free Paper Session: Intensive Care 1Free Paper Session: BurnsEpidemiology 2Chairperson Rei Ogawa and Ted Tredget Ronald Tompkins and Naoki Aikawa Michael Muller (Australia)Ricardo Roa (Chile)Nikki Allorto (South Africa)David Milliss (Australia)David Read (Australia)Mahmoud El-Oteify (Egypt)Drs Ted Tredget (Canada)Burn Reconstruction: ACanadian PerspectiveRonald Tompkins (USA)Comparisons of Genomic Changesafter Injury330 – Yen-Chang Hsiao (Taiwan)Flow-through anterolateral thigh flapfor reconstruction in electrical burns ofthe severely damaged upper extremity482 – Richard Lee (Australia)Association between duration ofmechanical ventilation and length ofstay, infection rate and mortality formajor burn patients in ICU144 – Nareswar Sarma Narei (India)Epidemiology of Paediatric burns in aBurn Unit of North-East IndiaRei Ogawa (Japan)Total Scar Management usingCustomized Surgical ProceduresDavid Herndon (USA)Genomic Changes in Tissuesafter Burns527 – Dong Chul Kim (Korea,Repulci of)The coverage of postburn fullthickness soft-tissue defects of lowerleg by EDL muscle flap and Suralmesoneural fasciocutaneous flap523 – Andrew Lindford (NewZealand)The Helsinki Burn Centre FrostbiteTreatment Protocol: Preliminary resultsusing thrombolysis93 – Henning Onarheim (Norway)Burns admitted to Norwegian hospitalsin 2012 – A nationwide surveyDrs Matt Donelan (USA)Laser Management of the Burn Scar319 – Tanja Klotz ( Australia)The use of moisturisers in scarmanagement following burn injury:aqueous cream||or alternatives, whatshould we be using?919 – Alexandra Murray (Australia)Critical care weakness in resuscitationburn patients in Western Australia:A case-control study and rootcauseanalysis.289 – Laura Pompermaier (Sweden)Adding co-morbidity to a mortalityprediction model does not improve thepredictive ability.Fiona Wood (Australia)Cell based Therapies in ScarPrevention and Scar Remodelling9 – Xueyong Li (China)Wound-healing improvement byresurfacing split-thickness skin donorsites with thin split-thickness grafting909 – Adelin Muganza(South Africa)Is early enteral feeding safe for severeburn patient?276 – Basil A. Pruitt, Jr. (USA)Integrated program of epidemiologicand demographic surveillance ofburn injury571 – Lincoln Millan (Brazil)Treatment of axillary contracturescaused by burns using flaps324 – Alexandra Murray (Australia)Immunonutrition in major burnsand glutamine usage throughoutAustralasia and the United Kingdom164 – Evangelos Sarantopoulos(Germany)The underestimated risk of a delayedreferral to burn specialists221 – Peter Moortgat (Belgium)The science of stretch: clinicalimplications of the mechanobiologyof scars290 – Irma Oen (Netherlands)Photographic assessment of burn sizeand depth: reliability and validity97 – Babur Shakirov (Uzbekistan)Deep foot burns: Epidemiology,management and consequences0800 – 1000117 – Rei Ogawa (Japan)Three-dimensional Reconstruction ofScar Contracture-bearing Axilla andDigital||Webs by Using the SquareFlap Method207 – Melinda Pacquola (Australia)Observational study of burns fluidresuscitation in ICU28 – Saera Song (Australia)Effect of diabetes on the burninjured patient941 – Joseph Ogrodnik (USA)Current choices for woundcoverage in Acute Burns in theUnited States-Aesthetic||andfunctional considerations47 – Jennifer Paratz (Australia)B-type natriuretic peptide: A newmarker of sepsis post burn injury?935 – Ravi Sood (USA)Genetic risk factors for post-burnhypertrophic scarring: results ofa||cross-sectional study908 – Burak Ozkan (Turkey)Multiple tissue expander utilization inwide burn scars of upper extremity759 – Chandini Perera (Sri Lanka)Major burns outcomes in a hospitalwith limited access to intensivecare||services: An opportunity toanalyse the effects of intubationand mechanical ventilation onpatient outcome.695 – Hilary Wallace (Australia)Epidemiology of household burnadmissions: Bir Hospital, Nepal,2002-2013359 – Cherng-Kang Perng (Taiwan)The clinical manifestation,diagnosis and surgical treatmentof chronic radiation ulcer aftercardiac catheterization386 – Bruce Potenza (USA)Prospective review of central venouscatheter colonization and central lineassociated blood stream infection inburn patients291 – Shahla Yekta (USA)In-depth qualitative interviewsand a cross-sectional study ofpatients||hospitalised with severe burninjuries at two hospitals in Kenya314 – Tracey Perrett (New Zealand)Development of a predictive model forinpatient therapy time163 – Frank Sander (Germany)Summary of experience with NexoBridenzymatic debridement of deeplyburned hands610 – Helma Hofland (Netherlands)Burn injuries in children < 1 year atthe Burns Unit, Queen Elizabeth CentralHospital (QECH), Blantyre, Malawi;20 years of experience shows highincidence and increased mortality505 – Umesh Shah (India)Co2 fractional laser- A new boon in themanagement of Burns scars in Asian(Indian) skin157 – Yaron Shoham (Israel)Long term scarring and quality of lifein NexoBrid vs. SOC debrided burnpatients: Results of a controlled trial1000 – 1030 MORNING TEA and EXHIBITION VIEWING2417th Congress of the International Society for Burn Injuries<strong>ISBI</strong> <strong>2014</strong> Sydney


Thursday 16 October <strong>2014</strong>(continued)Room Level 3 Ballroom Level 4 Room 1 Level 4 Room 2 Level 4 Room 3 Level 4 Room 4SessionNameSymposium 17:Laser, Fat Grafting, MinimallyInvasive TechniquesSymposium 18:PreventionFree Paper Session: OutcomeMeasures 2Free Paper Session: Intensive Care 3 Free Paper Session: Research 5Chairperson John Harvey and Matt Donelan Michael Peck Healther Cleland (Australia)Jui-Yung Yang (Taiwan)Keith Judkins (UK)Athina Lavrentieva (Greece)Chris Adams (New Zealand)Dong Chul Kim (Korea)The use of the Vascular andFractional C02 Laser in thetreatment of Hypertrophic burnsscars and contracturesKeith Judkins (United Kingdom)Reviewing prevention in Europe/UK562 – Paul Gittings (Australia)Establishing the reliability and validityof the Lower Limb Functional Index(LLFI) in Western Australian lower limbburns patients149 – Neophytos Stylianou(United Kingdom)Patient outcomes vs. service workload:an analysis of lengths of stay in theburn service of England and Wales55 – Zachary Munn (Australia)The evolution of an evidence-basedresource for burns care1030 – 1120Matthias Donelan (USA)The Boston experienceRebecca Ivers (Australia)Research and policy: burn injury inAboriginal children in Australia667 – Sepehr Lajevardi (Australia)Impact of first-aid on clinical outcomeof large burns851 – Kian Tjon Tan(United Kingdom)The Emergency Management ofSevere Burns course: A 16 yearexperience in the UK471 – Vetrichevvel ThirtharPalanivelu (Australia)Effect of non-severe burn injury on thedorsal root ganglion and the impact ofinflammatory modulationPeter Schumaker (USA)Fractional Ablative C02 treatment ofburns scars contracturesHilary Wallace (Australia)Working together to inform burnprevention in Nepal: Results ofa collaboration between a burnshospital, local NGO and research unit692 – Jong Lee (USA)Readmission following acuteburn hospitalization to paediatricburn centre615 – Jussi Valtonen (Finland)Experience of fixating split-thicknessskin grafts (STSG) on burn woundsby||Negative Pressure Wound Therapy(NPWT)632 – Johan Thorfinn (Sweden)High-voltage injury may result inlate-onset paraplegia and atrophy ofthe spinal cordJohn Friedstat (USA)Continuing improvement in burnsscars with additional treatmentsJanine Duke (Australia)Answers to your burning questions:using population-based and clinicaldata for prevention620 – Koen Maertens (Belgium)Does outpatient satisfaction surveyslead to happier patients?697 – Nicholas Smith (Australia)Cumulative fasting times for majorburn injury patients576 – Samantha Valvis (Australia)The immune response to burnand non-burn trauma: What’sthe difference?Continuing improvement in burnsscars with additional treatmentsChandini Perera (Sri Lanka)The Sri Lankan experience--Usingmorbidity & mortality data toeffect change443 – Jill Meirte (Belgium)Clinimetric properties of a newpressure algometer to evaluatepressure pain||threshold in patientswith burn scars733 – Elizabeth Wharton(United Kingdom)Supra-early excision of burn wounds:an evolving practice179 – Yiwei Wang (Australia)Characterization of elastin-Integra onwound contraction and angiogenesis1120 – 1145Sydney Ch’ng (Australia)Fat grafting in the management ofburns scars- Theoretical back groundand future potential693 – Namal Munasinghe (Australia)Victorian adult burns service:our experience with the ModifiedMeek technique122 – Hyeong Tae Yang (Korea)Assessment of biochemical markersin early post-burn period for predictionof||acute kidney injury and mortalityin patients with major burn injury:Comparison||of serum creatinine,serum cystatin-c, serum and urineneutrophil||gelatinase-associatedlipocalin (NGAL)914 – Christopher Wearn(United Kingdom)Proton-NMR metabolomics asan approach to study metabolicresponses to thermal injuryPhilippa Mccaffrey (Australia)The place of Micro-needling the longterm remodelling of burns scars266 – Daizhi Peng (China)Plasma circulating DNA levels in burnpatients and its clinical significance21 – Jui-Yung Yang (Taiwan)The Role of PiCCO System in Elder andExtensive Burns904 – Yee Wong (USA)Ubiquitin urine levels in burn patients1145 – 1200The Vancouver Scar scale is notenough. Objectivity is the newparadigm in burns scar assessment772 – Megan Simons (Australia)Test-retest reliability of thePOSAS, Colorimeter, 3D camera,and ultrasound.629 – Mete Dolapci (Turkey)The effects of albumin or fresh frozenplasma resuscitation in major burnvictims on mortality185 – Yong-Ming Yao (China)The effect of HMGB1 on functionaldifferentiation of regulatory dendriticcell and its receptor mechanismafter burnsRobert Mclaughlin (Australia)Optical Coherence Tomography in theassessment of burns scars vascularity468 – Yvonne Singer (Australia)The ANZBA Burn Quality ImprovementProgram (BQIP): Improving burn careacross two nations.8 – Kian Tjon Tan (Unites Kingdom)The Mersey Burns App: A validationand usability studyRommel Cruzado (Australia)Ultrasound jn the assessment ofburns scars for Fractional C02 lasertreatment linking MJoule to mm1200 – 1300 New Executive Committee Meeting(lunch meeting)1200 – 1330 LUNCH and EXHIBITION VIEWING. POSTER VIEWING LEVEL 4 FOYER1330 CLOSESunday 12 – Thursday 16 October <strong>2014</strong> Hilton Sydney Hotel • Sydney, Australia 27

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