Treatment

Burn and Plastic Surgery

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Burn and Plastic Surgery:-

We are proud of our hospital's highly experienced and highly trained medical experts. Our hospital has a large team of highly qualified and certified specialists in Aesthetic Plastic Surgery, Cosmetology, and Beauty Therapy.


All of them have had a very active professional career in the country's higher universities and important higher hospitals. The qualification of surgeons and faculty in Anand Hospital Baloda Bazar is meaningful and verifiable.


When you have a severe wound, including a burn that has limited your mobility, causes a loss of sensation, or is cosmetically unsuitable, plastic surgery may be an option.


Plastic surgery for Burns and different Wounds:

If your wound is extreme, you may need to undergo debriding, which is the removal of lifeless tissue, before a reconstructive surgical procedure.


skin graft

A skin graft is a surgical operation in which healthy skin is removed from an unaffected area of ??the body and applied to injured or discolored skin.


Perforations and skin grafts may be used to surgically cast off the area of ??pores and skin in case of bone fractures, large wounds, most cancers, burns, or chapped lips.


There are two types of skin grafts:

  • Full-thickness skin grafts where the top layer of skin, the epidermis and the entire inner layer of the skin are removed and the area is closed with stitches.

  • A small patch of skin is removed, usually from the neck, behind the ear, or the inside of the arm where the epidermis and dermis are removed and the area is left to heal without stitching. But is taken from the thigh, hip or upper arm.

  • flap surgery

    In flap surgery, living tissue is moved from one part of the body to another along the veins that keep it alive.


    Flap surgery can be used for many different reasons. Including breast reconstruction, repair of open fractures, large wounds, and cleft lip.


    In most cases the skin is partially attached to the body and forms a flap. The flap is then replaced with stitches at the injured site.


    Sometimes a technique called free flap is used. In this, a part of the skin and the veins supplying blood to it are separated from the original source of blood and attached to the new site. A technique called microsurgery is used to reattach fine blood vessels to the new site.


    Depending on the location and size of the flap, the operation may be performed using a general or local anesthetic.


    Flap surgery maintains the blood supply to the affected area so it is less likely to fail than skin grafts.