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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Clinical safety and effectiveness evaluation of a new antimicrobial wound dressing designed to manage exudate, infection and biofilm

TLDR
A clinical user evaluation supports the growing body of evidence that the anti‐biofilm technology in the NGAD results in a safe and effective dressing for the management of a variety of challenging wound types.
Abstract
The objective of this work was to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of a next-generation antimicrobial wound dressing (NGAD; AQUACEL® Ag+ Extra™ dressing) designed to manage exudate, infection and biofilm. Clinicians were requested to evaluate the NGAD within their standard protocol of care for up to 4 weeks, or as long as deemed clinically appropriate, in challenging wounds that were considered to be impeded by suspected biofilm or infection. Baseline information and post-evaluation dressing safety and effectiveness data were recorded using standardised evaluation forms. This data included wound exudate levels, wound bed appearance including suspected biofilm, wound progression, skin health and dressing usage. A total of 112 wounds from 111 patients were included in the evaluations, with a median duration of 12 months, and biofilm was suspected in over half of all wounds (54%). After the introduction of the NGAD, exudate levels had shifted from predominantly high or moderate to low or moderate levels, while biofilm suspicion fell from 54% to 27% of wounds. Wound bed coverage by tissue type was generally shifted from sloughy or suspected biofilm towards predominantly granulation tissue after the inclusion of the NGAD. Stagnant (65%) and deteriorating wounds (27%) were shifted to improved (65%) or healed wounds (13%), while skin health was also reported to have improved in 63% of wounds. High levels of clinician satisfaction with the dressing effectiveness and change frequency were accompanied by a low number of dressing-related adverse events (n = 3; 2·7%) and other negative observations or comments. This clinical user evaluation supports the growing body of evidence that the anti-biofilm technology in the NGAD results in a safe and effective dressing for the management of a variety of challenging wound types.

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Citations
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Antimicrobial Silver Nanoparticles for Wound Healing Application: Progress and Future Trends

TL;DR: This review aims at providing the reader with an overview of the most recent progress in silver nanotechnology, with a special focus on the role of silver in the wound healing process.
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Antibiotic resistance and biofilm tolerance: a combined threat in the treatment of chronic infections

TL;DR: A combination antibiofilm/antimicrobial wound dressing has been shown to facilitate healing in previously biofilm-impaired non-healing wounds, and must be considered as part of antibiotic stewardship programmes to reduce the usage and implications of antibiotic therapy, and improve outcomes associated with chronic infections.
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Emerging Innovative Wound Dressings

TL;DR: This review discusses the various properties of the emerging wound dressings that are designed in attempts to improve wound care upon skin injury.
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Microbiota of Chronic Diabetic Wounds: Ecology, Impact, and Potential for Innovative Treatment Strategies.

TL;DR: A review of recent work on the impact of commensal and pathogenic microbiota on DFU etiology, as well as the mechanisms of interkingdom microbial–host communication offers new microbiological perspectives that may hold potential in the prevention and treatment of chronic diabetic wounds.
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Nanofibrous Electrospun Heart Decellularized Extracellular Matrix-Based Hybrid Scaffold as Wound Dressing for Reducing Scarring in Wound Healing

TL;DR: A nanofibrous electrospun hd ECM-based hybrid scaffold (NEhdHS), which is a PLCL membrane, including hdECM as an active agent, was tested as a wound dressing to assess its fundamental biochemical and physical features in wound healing.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Biofilms in chronic wounds

TL;DR: Bacterial biofilm prevalence in specimens from chronic wounds relative to acute wounds observed in this study provides evidence that biofilms may be abundant in chronic wounds.
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Distribution, Organization, and Ecology of Bacteria in Chronic Wounds

TL;DR: It is suggested that bacteria present within these wounds tend to be aggregated in microcolonies imbedded in a self-produced matrix, characteristic of the biofilm mode of growth, which supports the development of new diagnostic and treatment strategies for chronic wounds.
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Criteria for Identifying Wound Infection.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used traditional criteria used in many surveys and their advantage is that they are simple, reproducible and easily recognized by different observers, however, identification of infection may be difficult in some circumstances, and identifying patients who are likely to develop infection is rare.
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Towards diagnostic guidelines for biofilm-associated infections

TL;DR: This review is designed to give an overview of biofilm-associated infections (BAI) and to propose a platform for further discussion that includes clinicians, medical microbiologists, and biofilm researchers who are stakeholders in advancing the scientific pursuit of better diagnosis and treatment of BAI to mitigate their human and healthcare costs.
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Controlling wound bioburden with a novel silver-containing Hydrofiber dressing.

TL;DR: The results show that the silver‐containing dressing makes silver available at a dressing–agar interface at a concentration that is effective against a broad range of aerobic, anaerobic, and antibiotic‐resistant microorganisms.
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