4.4 Review

Enhancing wound healing dressing development through interdisciplinary collaboration

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jbm.b.34861

Keywords

biomedical engineering; interdisciplinary teams; negative pressure wound therapy; wound dressings; wound healing

Funding

  1. R3 lab

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The wound healing process consists of four phases and innovations in wound dressings and technologies aim to enhance the body's ability to close wounds and restore damaged tissues. Collaboration between medical and scientific fields is crucial for translating new discoveries from lab to bedside treatments. Deeper collaboration between multiple disciplines can accelerate the advancement of novel wound healing technologies.
The process of wound healing includes four phases: Hemostasis, inflammation, proliferation, and remodeling. Many wound dressings and technologies have been developed to enhance the body's ability to close wounds and restore the function of damaged tissues. Several advancements in wound healing technology have resulted from innovative experiments by individual scientists or physicians working independently. The interplay between the medical and scientific research fields is vital to translating new discoveries in the lab to treatments at the bedside. Tracing the history of wound dressing development reveals that there is an opportunity for deeper collaboration between multiple disciplines to accelerate the advancement of novel wound healing technologies. In this review, we explore the different types of wound dressings and biomaterials used to treat wounds, and we investigate the role of multidisciplinary collaboration in the development of various wound management technologies to illustrate the benefit of direct collaboration between physicians and scientists.

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