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Scar massage for hypertrophic burns scarring-A systematic review.

Burns : journal of the International Society for Burn Injuries
February 1, 2018
P Ault et al. (3 authors)
Journal ArticleSystematic ReviewHuman Study
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to assess the efficacy of scar massage in improving functional and cosmetic outcomes of hypertrophic scarring following burns.

Results Summary

Scar massage showed significant improvements in scar thickness, depression, pain, vascularity, pliability, and scar height, with pruritus trending toward significance. The review highlighted the poor quality of existing evidence and the need for better assessment tools.

Population

258 human participants and 15 animal subjects with hypertrophic burn scars.

Effective Dosage

Not specified

Duration

Not specified

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (13)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
scar massage
decrease
scar thickness as measured with ultrasonography
human participants and animal subjects who received scar massage following a thermal injury resulting in hypertrophic scarring
p=0.001; g=-0.512
was effective
#1
scar massage
decrease
depression (Centre for Epidemiologic Studies - Depression [CES-D])
human participants and animal subjects who received scar massage following a thermal injury resulting in hypertrophic scarring
p=0.031; g=-0.555
was effective
#2
scar massage
decrease
pain as measured with Visual Analogue Scale (VAS)
human participants and animal subjects who received scar massage following a thermal injury resulting in hypertrophic scarring
p=0.000; g=-1.133
was effective
#3
scar massage
decrease
scar characteristics including vascularity
human participants and animal subjects who received scar massage following a thermal injury resulting in hypertrophic scarring
p=0.000; g=-1.837
was effective
#4
scar massage
decrease
scar characteristics including pliability
human participants and animal subjects who received scar massage following a thermal injury resulting in hypertrophic scarring
p=0.000; g=-1.270
was effective
#5
scar massage
decrease
scar characteristics including scar height
human participants and animal subjects who received scar massage following a thermal injury resulting in hypertrophic scarring
p=0.000; g=-2.054
was effective
#6
scar massage
decrease
pruritus
human participants and animal subjects who received scar massage following a thermal injury resulting in hypertrophic scarring
p=0.095; g=-1.157
trended towards significance
#7
scar massage
decrease
scar height
hypertrophic burns scaring
-
may be effective
#8
scar massage
decrease
vascularity
hypertrophic burns scaring
-
may be effective
#9
scar massage
decrease
pliability
hypertrophic burns scaring
-
may be effective
#10
scar massage
decrease
pain
hypertrophic burns scaring
-
may be effective
#11
scar massage
decrease
pruritus
hypertrophic burns scaring
-
may be effective
#12
scar massage
decrease
depression
hypertrophic burns scaring
-
may be effective
#13
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Scar massage is used in burn units globally to improve functional and cosmetic outcomes of hypertrophic scarring following a burn, however, the evidence to support this therapy is unknown. OBJECTIVE: To review the literature and assess the efficacy of scar massage in hypertrophic burn scars. METHODS: MEDLINE, PubMed, Embase, CINAHL and the Cochrane Library were searched using the key words "burn", "burn injury", "thermal injury" and "scar", "hypertrophic scar" and "massage", "manipulation", "soft tissue mobilisation", "soft tissue manipulation". The articles were scored by the assessors using the Physiotherapy Evidence Database (PEDro) scale and outcome measures on range of motion (ROM), cosmesis (vascularity, pliability, height), pain scores, pruritus, and psychological measures of depression and anxiety were extracted. RESULTS: Eight publications were included in the review with 258 human participants and 15 animal subjects who received scar massage following a thermal injury resulting in hypertrophic scarring. Outcome measures that demonstrated that scar massage was effective included scar thickness as measured with ultrasonography (p=0.001; g=-0.512); depression (Centre for Epidemiologic Studies - Depression [CES-D]) (p=0.031; g=-0.555); pain as measured with Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) (p=0.000; g=-1.133) and scar characteristics including vascularity (p=0.000; g=-1.837), pliability (p=0.000; g=-1.270) and scar height (p=0.000; g=-2.054). Outcome measures that trended towards significance included a decrease in pruritus (p=0.095; g=-1.157). CONCLUSIONS: It appears that there is preliminary evidence to suggest that scar massage may be effective to decrease scar height, vascularity, pliability, pain, pruritus and depression in hypertrophic burns scaring. This review reflects the poor quality of evidence and lack of consistent and valid scar assessment tools. Controlled, clinical trials are needed to develop evidence-based guidelines for scar massage in hypertrophic burns scarring.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
BurnsCicatrix, HypertrophicDepressionHumansMassagePruritusQuality of Life
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy75/10
Quality65/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations48
Citations/Year6.9
Relative Citation Ratio3.97
NIH Percentile90%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.75
Weight Score2.00
Normalized Score0.63
Related Supplements
Scar massage for hypertrophic burns scarring-A systematic re... | Panacea Index