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Management of severe head injury with brain exposure in three loggerhead sea turtles Caretta caretta

TitleManagement of severe head injury with brain exposure in three loggerhead sea turtles Caretta caretta
Publication TypeArticolo su Rivista peer-reviewed
Year of Publication2016
AuthorsFranchini, D., Cavaliere L., Valastro C., Carnevali Fiorella, Van der Esch Andrew, Lai O., and Di Bello A.
JournalDiseases of Aquatic Organisms
Volume119
Pagination145-152
ISSN01775103
Keywordsanimal, Animals, bandage, Bandages, Brain, Caretta, Caretta caretta, case report, cells and cell components, Cheloniidae, Craniocerebral Trauma, endangered species, human activity, injury, lesion, Mediterranean Sea, Pathology, Penetrating, skull, species conservation, turtle, Turtles, veterinary, wounding, Wounds
Abstract

The loggerhead Caretta caretta is the most common sea turtle in the Mediterranean. Currently, sea turtles are considered endangered, mainly due to the impact of human activities. Among traumatic lesions, those involving the skull, if complicated by brain exposure, are often life-threatening. In these cases, death could be the outcome of direct trauma of the cerebral tissue or of secondary meningoencephalitis. This uncontrolled study aims to evaluate the use of a plantderived dressing (1 Primary Wound Dressing®) in 3 sea turtles with severe lesions of the skull exposing the brain. Following surgical curettage, the treatment protocol involved exclusive use of the plant-derived dressing applied on the wound surface as the primary dressing, daily for the first month and then every other day until the end of treatment. The wound and peri-wound skin were covered with a simple secondary dressing without any active compound (non-woven gauze with petroleum jelly). Data presented herein show an excellent healing process in all 3 cases and no side effects due to contact of the medication with the cerebral tissue. © Inter-Research 2016.

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URLhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84969218034&doi=10.3354%2fdao02983&partnerID=40&md5=d77460b0d1d518fc3f67e686c307bf7a
DOI10.3354/dao02983
Citation KeyFranchini2016145