recent advances in wound healing

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RECENT ADJUNCTS TO WOUND HEALING Dr.E.Kaushik Kumar Department of General Surgery Stanley Medical College Hospital,Chennai

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Page 1: Recent advances in wound healing

RECENT ADJUNCTS TO WOUND HEALING

Dr.E.Kaushik Kumar

Department of General Surgery

Stanley Medical College Hospital,Chennai

Page 2: Recent advances in wound healing

•  என்பி� லதனை�வெயி�ல்போபி�லக் கா�யுபோ� அன்பி� லதனை�அறம்.

• Virtue will burn up the soul which is without love, even as the sun burns up the creature which is without bone

Page 3: Recent advances in wound healing

Introduction

• Tried and True treatments

• Updated and improved variations of previous treatments

• Entirely new fields of study

Page 4: Recent advances in wound healing

Advances in Wound Healing

• Silver

• Negative Pressure Therapy

• Advanced Dressings

• Skin Substitutes

• Growth Factors and Biologic wound products

• Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy

Page 5: Recent advances in wound healing

Silver

• Time honored in wound care-69 BC

• New forms of delivery aim to increase the efficacy while minimizing side effects

• Favourable broad spectrum coverage- Antibiotic resistant organisms

Page 6: Recent advances in wound healing

• Highly reactive charged silver ion (Ag+) negatively charged particles such as proteins, DNA, RNA, and chloride ions.

• Bactericidal material-kills on contact• Inhibiting the respiratory chain at the

cytochrome level

• Interfering with electron transport

• Denaturing nucleic acids

• Inhibiting DNA replication

• Altering cell membrane permeability

Page 7: Recent advances in wound healing

• ↓ MMP activity because of its inhibitory effect on zinc activity

• Inhibitory effect on release of proinflammatory cytokines and tumour necrosis factor–alpha

Page 8: Recent advances in wound healing

Ideal Delivery System

• Adequate concentration of silver

• Long enough residual activity.

Page 9: Recent advances in wound healing

• Gauze

• Hydrocolloids,

• Alginates

• Foams

• Creams

• Gels but each of them differ in the way in which silver ions are released

Page 10: Recent advances in wound healing

Silver Sulfadiazine and Nitrate

• Higher rate of resistance

• Impaired reepithelialization

• Pseudoeschar formation

• Bone marrow toxicity from the propylene glycol

• High enough initial concentration (3176 mg/L and 3025 mg/L, resp. but have little to no residual activity

Page 11: Recent advances in wound healing

Nanocrystalline Silver Dressings

Page 12: Recent advances in wound healing

Nanocrystalline Silver dressings

• Two layers of high-density polyethylene net sandwiching a layer of rayon/polyester gauze

• Outer layer is coated with a nanocrystalline (<20 nm), noncharged form of silver (Ag0), and the inner layer helps maintain a moist environment for wound healing

Page 13: Recent advances in wound healing

• Noncharged silver is less reactive with negatively charged particles in the wound, it is deactivated much more slowly and provides an initial large bolus of silver followed by a sustained release into the wound.

• Maintain adequate concentrations (at least 70 mg/L) with good residual activity, keeping levels elevated over longer periods of time.

Page 14: Recent advances in wound healing

Spectrum

• Yeast

• Fungi

• Mold

• Methicillin-resistant Staph aureus (MRSA)

• vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE)

Page 15: Recent advances in wound healing

Resistance

• E. coli

• Enterobacter cloacae

• Klebsiella pneumoniae

• Acinetobacter baumannii

• Salmonella typhimurium

• Pseudomonas stutzeri 

Page 16: Recent advances in wound healing

Effectiveness

Sulfa

diaz

ine

Silv

er N

itrat

e

Nan

orys

talli

ne0

2

4

6

Time to Reduce bacterial colony

Page 17: Recent advances in wound healing

• Left in place for up to 5-7 days

• Avoids trauma to the new epithelial growth.

Page 18: Recent advances in wound healing

Caution

• Negative impact on fibroblasts

• Inhibition of keratinocyte growth

• Delay in reepithelialization

Page 19: Recent advances in wound healing

Topical negative pressure therapy (TNP)

Page 20: Recent advances in wound healing

• Vacuum assisted closure (VAC)

• Sub-atmospheric pressure dressing (SPD)

• Vacuum sealing technique (VST)

• Sealed surface wound suction (SSS)

• Negative pressure therapy (NPT)

Page 21: Recent advances in wound healing

• Bridge to reconstruction

• Promotes active wound healing at the cellular level through negative pressure.

• Wound is compartmentalised by an airtight seal around it and through a dressing interface

• Compartment is connected to an external suction apparatus

Page 22: Recent advances in wound healing

• Continuous or intermittent.

• Pressures used range between -100 to -125 mmHg.

• Macro strain (physical response) and micro strain (biological response) and subsequently removes exudates by an electromechanical pump

• Dressings are usually changed every 48-72h

Page 23: Recent advances in wound healing

• Increase dermal perfusion

• Stimulate granulation tissue

• Decrease interstitial fluid

• Control wound exudate

• Decrease bacterial load

Page 24: Recent advances in wound healing

Clinical indications

• Ulcers

• Burns

• Wound dehiscences

• Fistulae

• Adjunct in tissue salvage in reconstructive surgery, burns and trauma• preserving the vitality of tissues and flaps of

borderline viability

Page 25: Recent advances in wound healing

• Trauma patients undergoing damage-control laparotomy and abdominal compartment syndrome patients

• Traumatic orthopedic injuries

Page 26: Recent advances in wound healing

Wound Healing Barrier V.A.C. Therapy Mechanism

Inadequate protection against infection

Provides protected wound healing environment

Excess exudate Removes exudate

Excess edema (interstitial fluid)

Reduces edema (interstitial fluid)

Absence of moisture Provides a moist wound environment

Lack of adequate perfusion Promotes perfusion

Lack of granulation tissue formation

Removes barriers to cell migration and proliferation

Excess bacterial burden Removes infectious materials

Page 27: Recent advances in wound healing

Disadvantages

• Pain

• Fluid loss especially in large wounds

• Risk of bleeding

Page 28: Recent advances in wound healing

Recent dressings

• Hydrocolloids

• Alginates

• Foams

• Hydrogels

• Hydrofibers

Page 29: Recent advances in wound healing

Hydrocolloids

Page 30: Recent advances in wound healing

Hydrocolloids

• Gelatin, pectin and or carboxymethylcellulose

• Serve as occlusive or semi-occlusive dressings

• Impermeable to water, bacteria and other contaminants but permeable to water vapour

• Absorb wound exudates to form a hydrophilic gel.

• Most important advantage is their long wear time, which decreases the cost, inconvenience and local trauma associated with dressing changes.

Page 31: Recent advances in wound healing

• Promote fibrinolysis

• Angiogenesis

• Wound healing

• Without causing softening and breaking down of tissue.

Page 32: Recent advances in wound healing
Page 33: Recent advances in wound healing

• Not indicated • Arterial/neuropathic ulcers

• Infected or heavily exuding wounds because of risk of periwound maceration.

• Malodorous exudates, which can be mistaken for infection

Page 34: Recent advances in wound healing

Foam

Page 35: Recent advances in wound healing

Foam

• Highly absorbent polyurethane dressings, available as pads, sheets and cavity dressings

• Moist environment and provide thermal insulation to the wound

• Nonadherent, easy to apply and remove and are meant for highly exuding wounds

• Layered in combination with other materials with overlying compression bandages.

Page 36: Recent advances in wound healing

• Fluid absorption capacity varies with foam thickness

• Cushioning effect but they are not a substitute for pressure relieving devices

• Comparable to hydrocolloids according to some studies

• Foams may produce excessive malodorous drainage necessitating frequent dressing change

Page 37: Recent advances in wound healing

Alginates

Page 38: Recent advances in wound healing

Alginates

• Soft, non-woven fibres, which contain calcium and sodium salts of alginic acid.

• Ion exchange reaction occurs between calcium in the alginate and sodium in the wound fluid producing soluble calcium–sodium alginate -- a gelatinous mass maintains moist environment and facilitates autolytic debridement

Page 39: Recent advances in wound healing

• Fillers for undermined and tunnelled wounds

• Highly absorbent-absorbs 20 times its weight

• Periwound maceration-Lateral wicking

• May leave fibrous debris in the wound-biodegraded (reports of them causing long-term foreign body type reactions)

Page 40: Recent advances in wound healing

• Inhibitory to keratinocytes

• Accelerate wound healing when compared to control dressing

Page 41: Recent advances in wound healing

Collagen

Page 42: Recent advances in wound healing

• Important constituent of connective tissue

• Type I is mostly seen in healing tissues

• Chronic wounds -laying down a matrix which favours deposition of new tissue and attracts cells necessary for healing

• Chemotactic for fibroblasts and macrophages and also provide a temporary scaffold to allow in growth of tissue

Page 43: Recent advances in wound healing

• Human , porcine or bovine origin and are available as particle or sheet form

• Absorb wound exudates to form a soft biodegradable gel over the wound surface, which maintains wound moisture

Page 44: Recent advances in wound healing

Hydrogels

Page 45: Recent advances in wound healing

Hydrogel

• Polymers, glycerine or water-based gels, impregnated gauzes or sheet dressings

• High water content does not allow them to absorb large amount of exudates heavy exuding wounds.

• Gentle yet effective debriding and desloughing action• rehydrating necrotic tissue

• removing without damaging healthy tissue

Page 46: Recent advances in wound healing

• Rehydrate the wound bed

• Reduce pain because of their cooling effect

• Non-adhesive

• Fill dead spaces

• Easy to apply and remove

• Best suited for dry wounds or those with minimal exudates.

• Require a secondary dressing.

Page 47: Recent advances in wound healing

Hydrofibers

Page 48: Recent advances in wound healing

Hydrofibers

• Sterile sodium carboxymethyl cellulose fibres

• Conform to the wound surface, highly absorbent and interact with wound exudates to form a gel.

• Maintain a moist environment and allow autolytic debridement

Page 49: Recent advances in wound healing

Uses

• Pressure ulcers

• Lower limb ulcers

• Surgical wounds

Page 50: Recent advances in wound healing

Skin Substitutes

• Biosynthetic skin substitutes and cultured autologous engineered skin, are available to provide temporary or permanent coverage, with the advantages of availability in large quantities and negligible risk of infection or immunologic issues.

Page 51: Recent advances in wound healing

Biobrane

• Temporary dressing composed of knitted nylon mesh bonded to a thin silicone membrane and coated with porcine polypeptides

• Clean superficial and middermal

depth burns or as coverage for

donor sites in split-thickness

skin grafting

Page 52: Recent advances in wound healing

Transcyte

•Biosynthetic dressing of a semi-permeable silicone membrane on a nylon mesh coated with porcine collagen and newborn human fibroblast cells

•Superficial burns that do not require skin grafting, or as a temporary cover for excised burns prior to grafting

Page 53: Recent advances in wound healing

Dermagraft

• Dermagraft contains neonatal fibroblasts on a bioabsorbable polyglactin mesh

• Dermal collagen, glycosaminoglycans, growth factors, and fibronectin to support wound healing

• Temporary or permanent cover used for excised burn wounds as well as venous ulcers and pressure ulcers

Page 54: Recent advances in wound healing

Apligraf

• Apligraf is composed of an epidermal layer of allogeneic neonatal keratinocytes and fibroblasts from neonatal foreskin on bilayered type I bovine collagen

• adjunct covering to autograft, providing accelerated healing times

Page 55: Recent advances in wound healing

Integra

• Semibiologic bilayered dressing

composed of a matrix of type I bovine collagen, chondroitin-6-sulfate, a glycosaminoglycan from shark cartilage, under a temporary silicone epidermal sheet

• Pore size (70–200 μm) is designed to allow migration of the patient’s own endothelial cells and fibroblasts.

• Silicone sheet removed & a thin autograft is grafted onto the neodermis to complete the wound coverage.

Page 56: Recent advances in wound healing

• Indicated for excised deep partial- and full-thickness burn wounds

• Complex traumatic soft tissue reconstruction over exposed tendons, joints, and bone, as well as wounds from vascular and pressure ulcers

Page 57: Recent advances in wound healing

Growth Factors and Biologic Wound Products

• Biologic wound products aims to accelerate healing by augmenting or modulating inflammatory mediators

• Prostaglandin E1

• Cytokines-Chemokines , lymphokines, monokines, interleukins, colony-stimulating factors, and interferons.

• Becaplermin(Regranex)rhPDGF & EGF-FDA-approved products in the growth factor family

Page 58: Recent advances in wound healing

Top Closure System

• An innovative new technology created for skin stretching and secure wound closure

• Post traumatic

• Surgical

• Acute and chronic skin wounds, which do not respond to conventional wound care.

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• Avoiding the need for tissue expanders

• Substitute for tension sutures 

Page 61: Recent advances in wound healing

JETFORCE

•Comprehensive innovation for cleansing andDebridement

• Compressed oxygen combined with a minimalamount of saline solution

•fast and virtually painless debridement compared toother mechanical debridement methods.

Page 62: Recent advances in wound healing

Other methods

• Stem cell therapy

• Biodebridement- Maggots

• Topical Insulin

• Topical Anti0oxidant

• Hyperbaric oxygen(HBO)

Page 63: Recent advances in wound healing

References

• Advances in Wound Healing: A Review of Current Wound Healing Products Patrick Murphy  and Gregory R. D. Evans,Aesthetic and Plastic Surgery Institute, University of California Irvine Medical Center, 200 S. Manchester Avenue, Suite 650, Orange, CA 92868, USA

• M. Trop, M. Novak, S. Rodl, B. Hellbom, W. Kroell, and W. Goessler, “Silver-coated dressing acticoat caused raised liver enzymes and argyria-like symptoms in burn patient,” Journal of Trauma, vol. 60, no. 3, pp. 648–652, 2006. 

• E. K. Mooney, C. Lippitt, and J. Friedman, “Silver dressings [safety and efficacy reports],” Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, vol. 117, no. 2, pp. 666–669, 2006. 

• W. Stanford, B. W. Rappole, and C. L. Fox, “Clinical experience with silver sulfadiazine, a new topical agent for control of pseudomonas infections in burns,” Journal of Trauma, vol. 9, no. 5, pp. 377–388, 1969.

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• R. Warriner and R. Burrell, “Infection and the chronic wound: a focus on silver,” Advances in skin &amp; wound care., vol. 18, pp. 2–12, 2005. 

• B. S. Atiyeh, M. Costagliola, S. N. Hayek, and S. A. Dibo, “Effect of silver on burn wound infection control and healing: review of the literature,” Burns, vol. 33, no. 2, pp. 139–148, 2007. 

• R. Khundkar, C. Malic, and T. Burge, “Use of Acticoat dressings in burns: what is the evidence?” Burns, vol. 36, no. 6, pp. 751–758, 2010.

• Winter GD. Formation of scab and rate of epithelialization of superficial wounds in the skin of the young domestic pig. Nature. 1962;193:293–4. 

• Cho CY, Lo JS. Excision and repair: Dressing the part. DermatolClin. 1998;16:25–47. [PubMed]

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• Moon CH, Crabtree TG. New wound dressing techniques to accelerate healing. Curr Treat Options Infect Dis. 2003;5:251–60.

• Varghese MC, Balin AK, Carter DM, Caldwell D. Local environment of chronic wounds under synthetic dressings. Arch Dermatol. 1986;122:52–7.

•  Alvarez OM, Mertz PM, Eaglstein WH. The effect of occlusive dressings on collagen synthesis and re-epithelialization in superficial wounds. J Surg Res. 1983;35:142–8. 

• Rubio PA. Use of semiocclusive, transparent film dressings for surgical wound protection: An experience in 3637 cases. Int Surg. 1991;76:253–4. 

•  Jones AM, San Miguel L. Are modern wound dressings a clinical and cost effective alternative to the use of gauze? J Wound Care. 2006;15:65–9. 

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