K
Keith G Harding
Researcher at Cardiff University
Publications - 960
Citations - 20812
Keith G Harding is an academic researcher from Cardiff University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Factory (object-oriented programming). The author has an hindex of 71, co-authored 945 publications receiving 18104 citations. Previous affiliations of Keith G Harding include University of Nottingham & University Hospital of Wales.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Wound bed preparation: a systematic approach to wound management.
Gregory S. Schultz,R. Gary Sibbald,Vincent Falanga,Elizabeth A. Ayello,Caroline Dowsett,Keith G Harding,Marco Romanelli,Michael Stacey,Luc Téot,Wolfgang Vanscheidt +9 more
TL;DR: Wound bed preparation is the management of a wound in order to accelerate endogenous healing or to facilitate the effectiveness of other therapeutic measures to select the most appropriate intervention.
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Bacteria and wound healing.
Ruth Edwards,Keith G Harding +1 more
TL;DR: An appreciation of the factors affecting the progression from colonization to infection can help clinicians with the interpretation of clinical findings and microbiological investigations in patients with chronic wounds.
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Diabetic foot ulcers
TL;DR: The pathogenesis of foot ulceration is complex, clinical presentation variable, and management requires early expert assessment, and interventions should be directed at infection, peripheral ischaemia, and abnormal pressure loading caused by peripheral neuropathy and limited joint mobility.
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Science, medicine and the future: healing chronic wounds.
TL;DR: Allogeneic skin grafting and bioengineered skin equivalents are being used successfully in patients with venous leg ulcers and diabetic patients with foot ulcers.
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The sensitivity to honey of Gram-positive cocci of clinical significance isolated from wounds
TL;DR: To determine the sensitivity to honey of Gram‐positive cocci of clinical significance in wounds and demonstrate that inhibition is not exclusively due to osmotic effects, a small number of cocci were studied.