A Multidisciplinary Team Approach in a Complicated Infected Pressuresore Following Paraplegia. A case report

Authors

  • Alaa Alshaibat Department of Surgery, Northern Area Armed Forces Hospital, KKMC Saudi Arabia.
  • Mohamed Ghilani Department of Surgery, Northern Area Armed Forces Hospital, KKMC Saudi Arabia.
  • Mohammad Sidiq Department of Physiotherapy, Allied Medical Sciences, Madhav University, Rajasthan, India.
  • Wadha Alenazi Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Northern Area Armed Forces Hospital, King Khalid Military City Saudi Arabia.
  • Mohammad Qasim Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Northern Area Armed Forces Hospital, King Khalid Military City Saudi Arabia.
  • Faizan Kashoo Department of Physical Therapy and Health Rehabilitation, College of Applied Medical Sciences, Majmaah University, Al Majmaah 11952, Saudi Arabia. Email: f.kashoo@mu.edu.sa
  • Mehrunnisha Ahmad Department of Nursing, College of Applied Medical Sciences, Majmaah University, Al Majmaah 11952, Saudi Arabia.

Keywords:

Pressuresore; surgical management; paraplegia; nutrition; physical therapy modalities; nutrition.

Abstract

Background: A 15-year-old boy met with a road traffic accident in October 2016. The patient sustained a complete spinal cord injury at T11, resulting in paraplegia.
Case Description: Later in 2019, the patient was admitted to our hospital with bilateral recurrent infected pressure sore. The patient underwent extensive wound debridement, antibiotic therapy (intravenous and impregnated beads), acetabular curettage, and resection (Girdlestone procedure) of the left proximal femur followed by gluteus maximus flap grafting to fill the dead space. In addition, the patient received education and counseling, nursing care and nutritional intervention, and comprehensive physical therapy treatment, which includes exercises, ultraviolet-C irradiation, Tension therapy, extracorporeal therapy, education. The patient was discharged in a wheelchair after two months. The follow-up after three months showed the complete healing of pressure sore with improvement in the quality of life.
Outcome Measures: Outcome measures were hematological reports, Pediatric Quality of Life, Spinal Injury Association (ASIA) impairment scale, and range of motion by goniometer at the time of admission and discharge.
Conclusion: We conclude that pressure sores can be a life-threatening medical complication following spinal cord injury; timely multidisciplinary teamwork is crucial to prevent its reoccurrence.

Published

09-06-2021
Statistics
Abstract Display: 514
PDF Downloads: 488

How to Cite

Alaa Alshaibat, Mohamed Ghilani, Mohammad Sidiq, Wadha Alenazi, Mohammad Qasim, Faizan Kashoo, & Mehrunnisha Ahmad. (2021). A Multidisciplinary Team Approach in a Complicated Infected Pressuresore Following Paraplegia. A case report. International Journal of Physiotherapy, 8(2), 76–82. Retrieved from https://ijphy.com/index.php/journal/article/view/1000

Issue

Section

Case Study