4.6 Article

Challenges and Management in Wound Care

Journal

PLASTIC AND RECONSTRUCTIVE SURGERY
Volume 147, Issue 1S-1, Pages 9S-15S

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/PRS.0000000000007628

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Advancements in wound healing therapies, particularly the development of negative-pressure wound therapy, have significantly improved the treatment outcomes over the last five decades. The innovative medical devices not only accelerate wound healing, but also help prevent postoperative infections, making them of great significance in clinical practice.
Wounds have been one of the most prominent pathologies since the beginning of humanity. For the last 5 decades, a drastic improvement of healing has been observed, thanks to new medical devices based on fluid aspiration capacities and the development of negative pressure wound therapy. Negative-pressure wound therapy was initially designed for a double action, fluid aspiration and mechanical stimulation of wound edges by a foam. Successive technical evolutions of negative pressure wound therapy were declined since 1997 when Argenta and Morykwas first presented their solution. The adjunct of instillation in 2009 was considered as the first interactive dressing, allowing topical wound solutions to sequentially reach the wound, in alternance with negative pressure. Other devices based on the same principle were designed to prevent postoperative infections when placed over a suture after surgery. This long evolution could enhance the armamentarium of possible solutions, considerably reducing the wound healing time.

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