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Do Functional Keratin Dressings Accelerate Epithelialization in Human Partial Thickness Wounds? A Randomized Controlled Trial on Skin Graft Donor Sites

Objective: To determine if the experimental (keratin-based) dressing accelerates epithelialization rates during healing of partial-thickness wounds, relative to a Standard Care dressing. Method: A randomized control trial was conducted using a Standard Care dressing side by side with the experimenta...

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Autores principales: Davidson, Andrew, Jina, N. Hamesh, Marsh, Clive, Than, Martin, Simcock, Jeremy W.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Open Science Company, LLC 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3767044/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24058716
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author Davidson, Andrew
Jina, N. Hamesh
Marsh, Clive
Than, Martin
Simcock, Jeremy W.
author_facet Davidson, Andrew
Jina, N. Hamesh
Marsh, Clive
Than, Martin
Simcock, Jeremy W.
author_sort Davidson, Andrew
collection PubMed
description Objective: To determine if the experimental (keratin-based) dressing accelerates epithelialization rates during healing of partial-thickness wounds, relative to a Standard Care dressing. Method: A randomized control trial was conducted using a Standard Care dressing side by side with the experimental dressing on a sample (n=26) of partial-thickness donor site wounds. The proximal/distal placement of the control and treatment was randomized. Percentage epithelialization after approximately 7 days was estimated from which time to fully epithelialize can be inferred. Patients were grouped into “young” (≤50 y/o) and “old” (>50 y/o). Results: For the “old” patients (n=15), the median epithelialization percentage at 7 days is 5% and was significantly (P=.023) greater for the experimental dressing. For the “young” patients (n=11), the median epithelialization percentage at 7 days was 80% and there is no significant difference between the experimental and Standard Care control dressings. Conclusions: The experimental dressing significantly increases the rate of epithelialization of acute, traumatic partial-thickness wounds in older patients. We suggest that the dressing may be clinically useful in similar situations where epithelialization may be delayed because of patient or wound characteristics.
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spelling pubmed-37670442013-09-20 Do Functional Keratin Dressings Accelerate Epithelialization in Human Partial Thickness Wounds? A Randomized Controlled Trial on Skin Graft Donor Sites Davidson, Andrew Jina, N. Hamesh Marsh, Clive Than, Martin Simcock, Jeremy W. Eplasty Journal Article Objective: To determine if the experimental (keratin-based) dressing accelerates epithelialization rates during healing of partial-thickness wounds, relative to a Standard Care dressing. Method: A randomized control trial was conducted using a Standard Care dressing side by side with the experimental dressing on a sample (n=26) of partial-thickness donor site wounds. The proximal/distal placement of the control and treatment was randomized. Percentage epithelialization after approximately 7 days was estimated from which time to fully epithelialize can be inferred. Patients were grouped into “young” (≤50 y/o) and “old” (>50 y/o). Results: For the “old” patients (n=15), the median epithelialization percentage at 7 days is 5% and was significantly (P=.023) greater for the experimental dressing. For the “young” patients (n=11), the median epithelialization percentage at 7 days was 80% and there is no significant difference between the experimental and Standard Care control dressings. Conclusions: The experimental dressing significantly increases the rate of epithelialization of acute, traumatic partial-thickness wounds in older patients. We suggest that the dressing may be clinically useful in similar situations where epithelialization may be delayed because of patient or wound characteristics. Open Science Company, LLC 2013-08-29 /pmc/articles/PMC3767044/ /pubmed/24058716 Text en Copyright © 2013 The Author(s) http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/ This is an open-access article whereby the authors retain copyright of the work. The article is distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Journal Article
Davidson, Andrew
Jina, N. Hamesh
Marsh, Clive
Than, Martin
Simcock, Jeremy W.
Do Functional Keratin Dressings Accelerate Epithelialization in Human Partial Thickness Wounds? A Randomized Controlled Trial on Skin Graft Donor Sites
title Do Functional Keratin Dressings Accelerate Epithelialization in Human Partial Thickness Wounds? A Randomized Controlled Trial on Skin Graft Donor Sites
title_full Do Functional Keratin Dressings Accelerate Epithelialization in Human Partial Thickness Wounds? A Randomized Controlled Trial on Skin Graft Donor Sites
title_fullStr Do Functional Keratin Dressings Accelerate Epithelialization in Human Partial Thickness Wounds? A Randomized Controlled Trial on Skin Graft Donor Sites
title_full_unstemmed Do Functional Keratin Dressings Accelerate Epithelialization in Human Partial Thickness Wounds? A Randomized Controlled Trial on Skin Graft Donor Sites
title_short Do Functional Keratin Dressings Accelerate Epithelialization in Human Partial Thickness Wounds? A Randomized Controlled Trial on Skin Graft Donor Sites
title_sort do functional keratin dressings accelerate epithelialization in human partial thickness wounds? a randomized controlled trial on skin graft donor sites
topic Journal Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3767044/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24058716
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