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51 Wireless Electroceutical Dressing for the Treatment of Biofilm Infected Burn Wounds

INTRODUCTION: Burn injuries are common to all military conflicts. In combat, eradication and prevention of burn wound infection is complicated by high rates of soft tissue contamination and prolonged delays to definitive stateside care. Furthermore, in the battlefield setting the salvage rate for in...

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Autores principales: Nuutila, Kristo, Diaz, Victoria, Anselmo, Kristin, Steiner, Shomita, Sen, Chandan K, Carlsson, Anders H, Chan, Rodney K, Roy, Sashwati
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8945247/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jbcr/irac012.054
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author Nuutila, Kristo
Diaz, Victoria
Anselmo, Kristin
Steiner, Shomita
Sen, Chandan K
Carlsson, Anders H
Chan, Rodney K
Roy, Sashwati
author_facet Nuutila, Kristo
Diaz, Victoria
Anselmo, Kristin
Steiner, Shomita
Sen, Chandan K
Carlsson, Anders H
Chan, Rodney K
Roy, Sashwati
author_sort Nuutila, Kristo
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Burn injuries are common to all military conflicts. In combat, eradication and prevention of burn wound infection is complicated by high rates of soft tissue contamination and prolonged delays to definitive stateside care. Furthermore, in the battlefield setting the salvage rate for infected burned extremities is low. Therefore, a simple, easy, non-invasive and rapid method to protect the wound, while also inhibiting infection, would represent a significant advance in the treatment of combat burn wounds. The purpose of this clinical trial was to investigate the efficacy of an FDA approved disposable and easily portable, wireless electroceutical dressing (WED) in the treatment of burn wounds. The hypothesis was that a low electric field generated by the moisture-activated WED will reduce infection load, improve graft survival and take, enhance wound healing and restore skin barrier function of biofilm infected wounds. METHODS: A phase I, prospective, randomized, controlled clinical trial was performed to evaluate the efficacy of the WED dressing as compared to the standard of care (SoC) dressing to prevent and disrupt biofilms. Subjects were screened from inpatient admissions for traumatic burns >300cm(2) in size. In total 38 subjects were enrolled to the study. Subject burn wounds were divided into two parts and randomized to receive either the SoC dressing or the WED dressing. Dressings were changed on day 4, removed on day 7 and the burns were followed for 30 days. Small biopsies were collected on days 4 and 7 for histology, SEM examination of biofilm and for quantitative bacteriological analysis. In addition, non-invasive wound imaging techniques were utilized to study wound healing. Furthermore, Vancouver scar scale and patient observer scar assessment were used to evaluate quality of healing. RESULTS: The results showed that at the time of dressing removal, non-grafted burns that were treated with the WED dressing presented statistically significantly less biofilm in comparison to the SoC treated burns (p < 0.05). The results also demonstrated that the WED dressing was more efficient at eradicating biofilm than the SoC dressing. At the time of the dressing removal, biofilm score [0-3] had decreased in 48% of the WED dressing treated burns in comparison to 28% in the SoC treated burns. In terms of wound healing and quality of healing no significant differences were observed between the WED and the SoC dressings. CONCLUSIONS: This trial demonstrated that the WED dressing was more efficient against biofilm infection than the SoC dressing. In addition, the study concluded that the WED dressing performed equally well as the SoC in terms of burn wound healing.
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spelling pubmed-89452472022-03-28 51 Wireless Electroceutical Dressing for the Treatment of Biofilm Infected Burn Wounds Nuutila, Kristo Diaz, Victoria Anselmo, Kristin Steiner, Shomita Sen, Chandan K Carlsson, Anders H Chan, Rodney K Roy, Sashwati J Burn Care Res Correlative VII: Clinical Sciences: Wounds & Scars 1 INTRODUCTION: Burn injuries are common to all military conflicts. In combat, eradication and prevention of burn wound infection is complicated by high rates of soft tissue contamination and prolonged delays to definitive stateside care. Furthermore, in the battlefield setting the salvage rate for infected burned extremities is low. Therefore, a simple, easy, non-invasive and rapid method to protect the wound, while also inhibiting infection, would represent a significant advance in the treatment of combat burn wounds. The purpose of this clinical trial was to investigate the efficacy of an FDA approved disposable and easily portable, wireless electroceutical dressing (WED) in the treatment of burn wounds. The hypothesis was that a low electric field generated by the moisture-activated WED will reduce infection load, improve graft survival and take, enhance wound healing and restore skin barrier function of biofilm infected wounds. METHODS: A phase I, prospective, randomized, controlled clinical trial was performed to evaluate the efficacy of the WED dressing as compared to the standard of care (SoC) dressing to prevent and disrupt biofilms. Subjects were screened from inpatient admissions for traumatic burns >300cm(2) in size. In total 38 subjects were enrolled to the study. Subject burn wounds were divided into two parts and randomized to receive either the SoC dressing or the WED dressing. Dressings were changed on day 4, removed on day 7 and the burns were followed for 30 days. Small biopsies were collected on days 4 and 7 for histology, SEM examination of biofilm and for quantitative bacteriological analysis. In addition, non-invasive wound imaging techniques were utilized to study wound healing. Furthermore, Vancouver scar scale and patient observer scar assessment were used to evaluate quality of healing. RESULTS: The results showed that at the time of dressing removal, non-grafted burns that were treated with the WED dressing presented statistically significantly less biofilm in comparison to the SoC treated burns (p < 0.05). The results also demonstrated that the WED dressing was more efficient at eradicating biofilm than the SoC dressing. At the time of the dressing removal, biofilm score [0-3] had decreased in 48% of the WED dressing treated burns in comparison to 28% in the SoC treated burns. In terms of wound healing and quality of healing no significant differences were observed between the WED and the SoC dressings. CONCLUSIONS: This trial demonstrated that the WED dressing was more efficient against biofilm infection than the SoC dressing. In addition, the study concluded that the WED dressing performed equally well as the SoC in terms of burn wound healing. Oxford University Press 2022-03-23 /pmc/articles/PMC8945247/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jbcr/irac012.054 Text en © The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the American Burn Association. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Correlative VII: Clinical Sciences: Wounds & Scars 1
Nuutila, Kristo
Diaz, Victoria
Anselmo, Kristin
Steiner, Shomita
Sen, Chandan K
Carlsson, Anders H
Chan, Rodney K
Roy, Sashwati
51 Wireless Electroceutical Dressing for the Treatment of Biofilm Infected Burn Wounds
title 51 Wireless Electroceutical Dressing for the Treatment of Biofilm Infected Burn Wounds
title_full 51 Wireless Electroceutical Dressing for the Treatment of Biofilm Infected Burn Wounds
title_fullStr 51 Wireless Electroceutical Dressing for the Treatment of Biofilm Infected Burn Wounds
title_full_unstemmed 51 Wireless Electroceutical Dressing for the Treatment of Biofilm Infected Burn Wounds
title_short 51 Wireless Electroceutical Dressing for the Treatment of Biofilm Infected Burn Wounds
title_sort 51 wireless electroceutical dressing for the treatment of biofilm infected burn wounds
topic Correlative VII: Clinical Sciences: Wounds & Scars 1
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8945247/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jbcr/irac012.054
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